Jamieson-Fausset-Brown Bible Commentary
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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THE
FIRST BOOK OF SAMUEL,
OTHERWISE CALLED
THE FIRST BOOK OF THE KINGS.
Commentary by ROBERT JAMIESON
[1] [2]
[3] [4]
[5] [6]
[7] [8]
[9] [10]
[11] [12]
[13] [14]
[15] [16]
[17] [18]
[19] [20]
[21] [22]
[23] [24]
[25] [26]
[27] [28]
[29] [30]
[31]
CHAPTER 1
1Sa 1:1-8.
OF
ELKANAH AND
HIS
TWO
WIVES.
1, 2. a certain man of Ramathaim-zophim--The first word being in the
dual number, signifies the double city--the old and new town of Ramah
(1Sa 1:19).
There were five cities of this name, all on high ground. This city had
the addition of Zophim attached to it, because it was founded by Zuph,
"an Ephrathite," that is a native of Ephratha. Beth-lehem, and the
expression "of Ramathaim-zophim" must, therefore, be understood as
Ramah in the land of Zuph in the hill country of Ephratha. Others,
considering "mount Ephraim" as pointing to the locality in Joseph's
territory, regard "Zophim" not as a proper but a common noun,
signifying watchtowers, or watchmen, with reference either to the
height of its situation, or its being the residence of prophets who
were watchmen
(Eze 3:17).
Though a native of Ephratha or Beth-lehem-judah
(Ru 1:2),
Elkanah was a Levite
(1Ch 6:33, 34).
Though of this order, and a good man, he practised polygamy. This was
contrary to the original law, but it seems to have been prevalent among
the Hebrews in those days, when there was no king in Israel, and every
man did what seemed right in his own eyes
[Jud 21:25].
3. this man went up out of his city yearly to worship in Shiloh--In
that place was the "earth's one sanctuary," and thither he repaired at
the three solemn feasts, accompanied by his family at one of
them--probably the passover. Although a Levite, he could not personally
offer a sacrifice--that was exclusively the office of the priests; and
his piety in maintaining a regular attendance on the divine ordinances
is the more worthy of notice because the character of the two priests
who administered them was notoriously bad. But doubtless he believed,
and acted on the belief, that the ordinances were "effectual means of
salvation, not from any virtue in them, or in those who administered
them, but from the grace of God being communicated through them."
4. when . . . Elkanah offered, he gave to Peninnah . . . portions--The
offerer received back the greater part of the peace offerings, which he
and his family or friends were accustomed to eat at a social feast
before the Lord. (See on
Le 3:3;
De 12:12).
It was out of these consecrated viands Elkanah gave portions to all the
members of his family; but "unto Hannah he gave a worthy portion"; that
is, a larger choice, according to the Eastern fashion of showing regard
to beloved or distinguished guests. (See on
1Sa 9:24;
also see on
Ge 43:34).
6. her adversary also provoked her sore--The conduct of Peninnah was
most unbecoming. But domestic broils in the houses of polygamists are
of frequent occurrence, and the most fruitful cause of them has always
been jealousy of the husband's superior affection, as in this case of
Hannah.
1Sa 1:9-18.
HANNAH'S
PRAYER.
11. she prayed . . . she vowed a vow--Here is a specimen of the intense
desire that reigned in the bosoms of the Hebrew women for children.
This was the burden of Hannah's prayer; and the strong preference she
expressed for a male child originated in her purpose of dedicating him
to the tabernacle service. The circumstance of his birth bound him to
this; but his residence within the precincts of the sanctuary would
have to commence at an earlier age than usual, in consequence of the
Nazarite vow.
12-18. Eli marked her mouth--The suspicion of the aged priest seems to
indicate that the vice of intemperance was neither uncommon nor
confined to one sex in those times of disorder. This mistaken
impression was immediately removed, and, in the words, "God grant," or
rather, "will grant," was followed by an invocation which, as Hannah
regarded it in the light of a prophecy pointing to the accomplishment
of her earnest desire, dispelled her sadness, and filled her with
confident hope
[1Sa 1:18].
The character and services of the expected child were sufficiently
important to make his birth a fit subject for prophecy.
1Sa 1:20.
SAMUEL
BORN.
20. called his name Samuel--doubtless with her husband's consent. The
names of children were given sometimes by the fathers, and sometimes by
the mothers (see
Ge 4:1, 26; 5:29; 19:37; 21:3);
and among the early Hebrews, they were commonly compound names, one
part including the name of God.
21. the man Elkanah . . . went up to offer . . . his vow--The solemn
expression of his concurrence in Hannah's vow was necessary to make it
obligatory. (See on
Nu 30:3).
22. But Hannah went not up--Men only were obliged to attend the solemn
feasts
(Ex 23:17).
But Hannah, like other pious women, was in the habit of going, only she
deemed it more prudent and becoming to defer her next journey till her
son's age would enable her to fulfill her vow.
24. three bullocks--The Septuagint renders it "a bullock of three
years old"; which is probably the true rendering.
CHAPTER 2
1Sa 2:1-11.
HANNAH'S
SONG IN
THANKFULNESS TO
GOD.
1. Hannah prayed, and said--Praise and prayer are inseparably
conjoined in Scripture
(Col 4:2;
1Ti 2:1).
This beautiful song was her tribute of thanks for the divine goodness
in answering her petition.
mine horn is exalted in the Lord--Allusion is here made to a
peculiarity in the dress of Eastern women about Lebanon, which seems to
have obtained anciently among the Israelite women, that of wearing a
tin or silver horn on the forehead, on which their veil is suspended.
Wives, who have no children, wear it projecting in an oblique
direction, while those who become mothers forthwith raise it a few
inches higher, inclining towards the perpendicular, and by this slight
but observable change in their headdress, make known, wherever they go,
the maternal character which they now bear.
5. they that were hungry ceased--that is, to hunger.
the barren hath born seven--that is, many children.
6. he bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up--that is, He
reduces to the lowest state of degradation and misery, and restores to
prosperity and happiness.
8. He raiseth up the poor out of the dust, and lifteth up the beggar
from the dunghill--The dunghill, a pile of horse, cow, or camel offal,
heaped up to dry in the sun, and used as fuel, was, and is, one of the
common haunts of the poorest mendicants; and the change that had been
made in the social position of Hannah, appeared to her grateful heart
as auspicious and as great as the elevation of a poor despised beggar
to the highest and most dignified rank.
inherit the throne of glory--that is, possesses seats of honor.
10. the Lord shall judge the ends of the earth . . . exalt the horn of
his anointed--This is the first place in Scripture where the word
"anointed," or Messiah, occurs; and as there was no king in Israel at
the time, it seems the best interpretation to refer it to Christ. There
is, indeed, a remarkable resemblance between the song of Hannah and
that of Mary
(Lu 1:46).
11. the child did minister unto the Lord before Eli the priest--He
must have been engaged in some occupation suited to his tender age, as
in playing upon the cymbals, or other instruments of music; in lighting
the lamps, or similar easy and interesting services.
1Sa 2:12-17.
THE
SIN OF
ELl'S
SONS.
12. Now the sons of Eli were sons of Belial--not only careless and
irreligious, but men loose in their actions, and vicious and scandalous
in their habits. Though professionally engaged in sacred duties, they
were not only strangers to the power of religion in the heart, but they
had thrown off its restraints, and even ran, as is sometimes done in
similar cases by the sons of eminent ministers, to the opposite extreme
of reckless and open profligacy.
13-17. the priests' custom with the people--When persons wished to
present a sacrifice of peace offering on the altar, the offering was
brought in the first instance to the priest, and as the Lord's part was
burnt, the parts appropriated respectively to the priests and offerers
were to be sodden. But Eli's sons, unsatisfied with the breast and
shoulder, which were the perquisites appointed to them by the divine
law
(Ex 29:27;
Le 7:31, 32),
not only claimed part of the offerer's share, but rapaciously seized
them previous to the sacred ceremony of heaving or waving (see on
Le 7:29);
and moreover they committed the additional injustice of taking up with
their fork those portions which they preferred, while still raw. Pious
people revolted at such rapacious and profane encroachments on the dues
of the altar, as well as what should have gone to constitute the family
and social feast of the offerer. The truth is, the priests having
become haughty and unwilling in many instances to accept invitations to
those feasts, presents of meat were sent to them; and this, though done
in courtesy at first, being, in course of time, established into a
right, gave rise to all the rapacious keenness of Eli's sons.
1Sa 2:18-26.
SAMUEL'S
MINISTRY.
18. But Samuel ministered before the Lord, being a child--This
notice of his early services in the outer courts of the tabernacle was
made to pave the way for the remarkable prophecy regarding the high
priest's family.
girded with a linen ephod--A small shoulder-garment or apron, used in
the sacred service by the inferior priests and Levites; sometimes also
by judges or eminent persons, and hence allowed to Samuel, who, though
not a Levite, was devoted to God from his birth.
19. his mother made him a little coat, and brought it to him from year
to year--Aware that he could not yet render any useful service to the
tabernacle, she undertook the expense of supplying him with wearing
apparel. All weaving stuffs, manufacture of cloth, and making of suits
were anciently the employment of women.
20. Eli blessed Elkanah and his wife--This blessing, like that which
he had formerly pronounced, had a prophetic virtue; which, before long,
appeared in the increase of Hannah's family
(1Sa 2:21),
and the growing qualifications of Samuel for the service of the
sanctuary.
22-24. the women that assembled at the door of the tabernacle--This
was an institution of holy women of a strictly ascetic order, who had
relinquished worldly cares and devoted themselves to the Lord; an
institution which continued down to the time of Christ
(Lu 2:37).
Eli was, on the whole, a good man, but lacking in the moral and
religious training of his family. He erred on the side of parental
indulgence; and though he reprimanded them (see on
De 21:18),
yet, from fear or indolence, he shrank from laying on them the
restraints, or subjecting them to the discipline, their gross
delinquencies called for. In his judicial capacity, he winked at their
flagrant acts of maladministration and suffered them to make reckless
encroachments on the constitution, by which the most serious injuries
were inflicted both on the rights of the people and the laws of
God.
25. they hearkened not unto the voice of their father, because--it
should be therefore.
the Lord would slay them--It was not God's preordination, but their
own wilful and impenitent disobedience which was the cause of their
destruction.
1Sa 2:27-35.
A
PROPHECY AGAINST
ELI'S
HOUSE.
27. there came a man of God unto Eli, and said . . . that there shall not
be an old man in thine house--So much importance has always, in the
East, been attached to old age, that it would be felt to be a great
calamity, and sensibly to lower the respectability of any family which
could boast of few or no old men. The prediction of this prophet was
fully confirmed by the afflictions, degradation, poverty, and many
untimely deaths with which the house of Eli was visited after its
announcement (see
1Sa 4:11;
14:3; 22:18-23;
1Ki 2:27).
31. I will cut off thine arm, and the arm of thy father's house--By
the withdrawal of the high priesthood from Eleazar, the elder of
Aaron's two sons (after Nadab and Abihu were destroyed,
[Nu 3:4]),
that dignity had been conferred on the family of Ithamar, to which Eli
belonged, and now that his descendants had forfeited the honor, it was
to be taken from them and restored to the elder branch.
32. thou shalt see an enemy in my habitation--A successful rival for
the office of high priest shall rise out of another family
(2Sa 15:35;
1Ch 24:3; 29:22).
But the marginal reading, "thou shalt see the affliction of the
tabernacle," seems to be a preferable translation.
CHAPTER 3
1Sa 3:1-10.
THE
LORD
APPEARS TO
SAMUEL IN A
VISION.
1. the child Samuel ministered unto the Lord before Eli--His ministry
consisted, of course, of such duties in or about the sanctuary as were
suited to his age, which is supposed now to have been about twelve
years. Whether the office had been specially assigned him, or it arose
from the interest inspired by the story of his birth, Eli kept him as
his immediate attendant; and he resided not in the sanctuary, but in
one of the tents or apartments around it, assigned for the
accommodation of the priests and Levites, his being near to that of
the high priest.
the word of the Lord was precious in those days--It was very rarely
known to the Israelites; and in point of fact only two prophets are
mentioned as having appeared during the whole administration of the
judges
(Jud 4:4; 6:8).
there was no open vision--no publicly recognized prophet whom the
people could consult, and from whom they might learn the will of God.
There must have been certain indubitable evidences by which a
communication from heaven could be distinguished. Eli knew them, for he
may have received them, though not so frequently as is implied in the
idea of an "open vision."
3. ere the lamp of God went out in the temple of the Lord--The "temple"
seems to have become the established designation of the tabernacle, and
the time indicated was towards the morning twilight, as the lamps were
extinguished at sunrise (see
Le 6:12, 13).
5-18. he ran unto Eli, and said, Here am I; for thou calledst me--It is
evident that his sleeping chamber was close to that of the aged high
priest and that he was accustomed to be called during the night. The three
successive calls addressed to the boy convinced Eli of the divine
character of the speaker, and he therefore exhorted the child to give a
reverential attention to the message. The burden of [the Lord's
message] was an extraordinary premonition of the judgments that
impended over Eli's house; and the aged priest, having drawn the
painful secret from the child, exclaimed, "It is the Lord; let him do
what seemeth him good." Such is the spirit of meek and unmurmuring
submission in which we ought to receive the dispensations of God,
however severe and afflictive. But, in order to form a right estimate
of Eli's language and conduct on this occasion, we must consider the
overwhelming accumulation of judgments denounced against his person,
his sons, his descendants--his altar, and nation. With such a
threatening prospect before him, his piety and meekness were wonderful.
In his personal character he seems to have been a good man, but his
sons' conduct was flagrantly bad; and though his misfortunes claim our
sympathy, it is impossible to approve or defend the weak and unfaithful
course which, in the retributive justice of God, brought these
adversities upon him.
CHAPTER 4
1Sa 4:1-11.
ISRAEL
OVERCOME BY THE
PHILISTINES.
1. the word of Samuel came to all Israel--The character of Samuel as a
prophet was now fully established. The want of an "open vision" was
supplied by him, for "none of his words were let fall to the ground"
(1Sa 3:19);
and to his residence in Shiloh all the people of Israel repaired to
consult him as an oracle, who, as the medium of receiving the divine
command, or by his gift of a prophet, could inform them what was the
mind of God. It is not improbable that the rising influence of the
young prophet had alarmed the jealous fears of the Philistines. They
had kept the Israelites in some degree of subjection ever since the
death of Samson and were determined, by further crushing, to prevent
the possibility of their being trained by the counsels, and under the
leadership, of Samuel, to reassert their national independence. At all
events, the Philistines were the aggressors
(1Sa 4:2).
But, on the other hand, the Israelites were rash and inconsiderate in
rushing to the field without obtaining the sanction of Samuel as to the
war, or having consulted him as to the subsequent measures they took.
Israel went out against the Philistines to battle--that is, to resist
this new incursion.
Eben-ezer . . . Aphek--Aphek, which means "strength," is a name applied
to any fort or fastness. There were several Apheks in Palestine; but
the mention of Eben-ezer determines this "Aphek" to be in the south,
among the mountains of Judah, near the western entrance of the pass of
Beth-horon, and consequently on the borders of the Philistine territory.
The first encounter at Aphek being unsuccessful, the Israelites
determined to renew the engagement in better circumstances.
3-9. Let us fetch the ark of the covenant of the Lord out of Shiloh
unto us--Strange that they were so blind to the real cause of the
disaster and that they did not discern, in the great and general
corruption of religion and morals
(1Sa 2:22-25; 7:3;
Ps 78:58),
the reason why the presence and aid of God were not extended to them.
Their first measure for restoring the national spirit and energy ought
to have been a complete reformation--a universal return to purity of
worship and morals. But, instead of cherishing a spirit of deep
humiliation and sincere repentance, instead of resolving on the
abolition of existing abuses, and the re-establishing of the pure
faith, they adopted what appeared an easier and speedier course--they
put their trust in ceremonial observances, and doubted not but that the
introduction of the ark into the battlefield would ensure their
victory. In recommending this extraordinary step, the elders might
recollect the confidence it imparted to their ancestors
(Nu 10:35; 14:44),
as well as what had been done at Jericho. But it is more probable that
they were influenced by the heathenish ideas of their idolatrous
neighbors, who carried their idol Dagon, or his sacred symbols, to
their wars, believing that the power of their divinities was
inseparably associated with, or residing in, their images. In short,
the shout raised in the Hebrew camp, on the arrival of the ark,
indicated very plainly the prevalence among the Israelites at this time
of a belief in national deities--whose influence was local, and whose
interest was especially exerted in behalf of the people who adored
them. The joy of the Israelites was an emotion springing out of the
same superstitious sentiments as the corresponding dismay of their
enemies; and to afford them a convincing, though painful proof of their
error, was the ulterior object of the discipline to which they were now
subjected--a discipline by which God, while punishing them for their
apostasy by allowing the capture of the ark, had another end in
view--that of signally vindicating His supremacy over all the gods of
the nations.
1Sa 4:12-22.
ELI
HEARING THE
TIDINGS.
13-18. Eli sat upon a seat by the wayside--The aged priest, as a public
magistrate, used, in dispensing justice, to seat himself daily in a
spacious recess at the entrance gate of the city. In his intense
anxiety to learn the issue of the battle, he took up his usual place as
the most convenient for meeting with passers-by. His seat was an
official chair, similar to those of the ancient Egyptian judges, richly
carved, superbly ornamented, high, and without a back. The calamities
announced to Samuel as about to fall upon the family of Eli
[1Sa 2:34]
were now inflicted in the death of his two sons, and after his death,
by that of his daughter-in-law, whose infant son received a name that
perpetuated the fallen glory of the church and nation
[1Sa 4:19-22].
The public disaster was completed by the capture of the ark. Poor Eli!
He was a good man, in spite of his unhappy weaknesses. So strongly were
his sensibilities enlisted on the side of religion, that the news of
the capture of the ark proved to him a knell of death; and yet his
overindulgence, or sad neglect of his family--the main cause of all the
evils that led to its fall--has been recorded, as a beacon to warn all
heads of Christian families against making shipwreck on the same rock.
CHAPTER 5
1Sa 5:1, 2.
THE
PHILISTINES
BRING THE
ARK INTO THE
HOUSE OF
DAGON.
1. Ashdod--or Azotus, one of the five Philistine satrapies, and a
place of great strength. It was an inland town, thirty-four miles north
of Gaza, now called Esdud.
2. the house of Dagon--Stately temples were erected in honor of this
idol, which was the principal deity of the Philistines, but whose
worship extended over all Syria, as well as Mesopotamia and Chaldea;
its name being found among the Assyrian gods on the cuneiform
inscriptions
[RAWLINSON]. It was represented under a monstrous
combination of a human head, breast, and arms, joined to the belly and
tail of a fish. The captured ark was placed in the temple of Dagon,
right before this image of the idol.
1Sa 5:3-5.
DAGON
FALLS
DOWN.
3, 4. they of Ashdod arose early--They were filled with consternation
when they found the object of their stupid veneration prostrate before
the symbol of the divine presence. Though set up, it fell again, and
lay in a state of complete mutilation; its head and arms, severed from
the trunk, were lying in distant and separate places, as if violently
cast off, and only the fishy part remained. The degradation of their
idol, though concealed by the priests on the former occasion, was now
more manifest and infamous. It lay in the attitude of a vanquished
enemy and a suppliant, and this picture of humiliation significantly
declared the superiority of the God of Israel.
5. Therefore neither the priests . . . nor any . . . tread on the
threshold of Dagon--A superstitious ceremony crept in, and in the
providence of God was continued, by which the Philistines contributed
to publish this proof of the helplessness of their god.
unto this day--The usage continued in practice at the time when this
history was written--probably in the later years of Samuel's life.
1Sa 5:6-12.
THE
PHILISTINES
ARE
SMITTEN WITH
EMERODS.
6. the hand of the Lord was heavy upon them of Ashdod--The presumption
of the Ashdodites was punished by a severe judgment that overtook them
in the form of a pestilence.
smote them with emerods--bleeding piles, hemorrhoids
(Ps 78:66),
in a very aggravated form. As the heathens generally regarded diseases
affecting the secret parts of the body as punishments from the gods for
trespasses committed against themselves, the Ashdodites would be the
more ready to look upon the prevailing epidemic as demonstrating the
anger of God, already shown against their idol.
7. the ark of God shall not abide with us--It was removed successively
to several of the large towns of the country, but the same pestilence
broke out in every place and raged so fiercely and fatally that the
authorities were forced to send the ark back into the land of Israel
[1Sa 5:8-10].
11. they sent--that is, the magistrates of Ekron.
12. the cry of the city went up to heaven--The disease is attended
with acute pain, and it is far from being a rare phenomenon in the
Philistian plain [VAN
DE
VELDE].
CHAPTER 6
1Sa 6:1-9.
THE
PHILISTINES
COUNSEL
HOW TO
SEND
BACK THE
ARK.
1. the ark . . . was in the country of the Philistines seven
months--Notwithstanding the calamities which its presence had
brought on the country and the people, the Philistine lords were
unwilling to relinquish such a prize, and tried every means to retain
it with peace and safety, but in vain.
2, 3. the Philistines called for the priests and the diviners--The
designed restoration of the ark was not, it seems, universally approved
of, and many doubts were expressed whether the prevailing pestilence
was really a judgment of Heaven. The priests and diviners united all
parties by recommending a course which would enable them easily to
discriminate the true character of the calamities, and at the same time
to propitiate the incensed Deity for any acts of disrespect which might
have been shown to His ark.
4. Five golden emerods--Votive or thank offerings were commonly made
by the heathen in prayer for, or gratitude after, deliverance from
lingering or dangerous disorders, in the form of metallic (generally
silver) models or images of the diseased parts of the body. This is
common still in Roman Catholic countries, as well as in the temples of
the Hindus and other modern heathen.
five golden mice--This animal is supposed by some to be the jerboa
or jumping mouse of Syria and Egypt
[BOCHART]; by others, to be the
short-tailed field mouse, which often swarms in prodigious numbers and
commits great ravages in the cultivated fields of Palestine.
5. give glory unto the God of Israel--By these propitiatory presents,
the Philistines would acknowledge His power and make reparation for the
injury done to His ark.
lighten his hand . . . from off your gods--Elohim for god.
6. Wherefore then do ye harden your hearts, as the Egyptians and
Pharaoh hardened their hearts?--The memory of the appalling judgments
that had been inflicted on Egypt was not yet obliterated. Whether
preserved in written records, or in floating tradition, they were still
fresh in the minds of men, and being extensively spread, were doubtless
the means of diffusing the knowledge and fear of the true God.
7. make a new cart--Their object in making a new one for the purpose
seems to have been not only for cleanliness and neatness, but from an
impression that there would have been an impropriety in using one that
had been applied to meaner or more common services. It appears to have
been a covered wagon
(see on
2Sa 6:3).
two milch kine--Such untrained heifers, wanton and vagrant, would
pursue no certain and regular path, like those accustomed to the yoke,
and therefore were most unlikely of their own spontaneous motion to
prosecute the direct road to the land of Israel.
bring their calves home from them--The strong natural affection of
the dams might be supposed to stimulate their return homewards, rather
than direct their steps in a foreign country.
8. take the ark of the Lord, and lay it upon the cart--This mode of
carrying the sacred symbol was forbidden; but the ignorance of the
Philistines made the indignity excusable
(see on
2Sa 6:6).
put the jewels . . . in a coffer by the side thereof--The way of
securing treasure in the East is still in a chest, chained to the house
wall or some solid part of the furniture.
9-12. Beth-shemesh--that is, "house of the sun," now Ain Shems
[ROBINSON], a city of priests in Judah, in the southeast border of Dan,
lying in a beautiful and extensive valley.
JOSEPHUS says they were set
a-going near a place where the road divided into two--the one leading
back to Ekron, where were their calves, and the other to Beth-shemesh.
Their frequent lowings attested their ardent longing for their young,
and at the same time the supernatural influence that controlled their
movements in a contrary direction.
12. the lords of the Philistines went after them--to give their
tribute of homage, to prevent imposture, and to obtain the most
reliable evidence of the truth. The result of this journey tended to
their own deeper humiliation, and the greater illustration of God's
glory.
14. and they clave--that is, the Beth-shemites, in an irrepressible
outburst of joy.
offered the kine--Though contrary to the requirements of the law
(Le 1:3; 22:19),
these animals might properly be offered, as consecrated by God Himself;
and though not beside the tabernacle, there were many instances of
sacrifices offered by prophets and holy men on extraordinary occasions
in other places.
17, 18. And these are the golden emerods . . . and the mice--There were
five representative images of the emerods, corresponding to the five
principal cities of the Philistines. But the number of the golden
mice must have been greater, for they were sent from the walled towns
as well as the country villages.
18. unto the great stone of Abel--Abel, or Aben, means
"stone," so that without resorting to italics, the reading should
be, "the great stone."
19. he smote the men of Beth-shemesh, because they had looked into the
ark--In the ecstasy of delight at seeing the return of the ark, the
Beth-shemesh reapers pried into it beneath the wagon cover; and instead
of covering it up again, as a sacred utensil, they let it remain
exposed to common inspection, wishing it to be seen, in order that all
might enjoy the triumph of seeing the votive offerings presented to it,
and gratify curiosity with the sight of the sacred shrine. This was the
offense of those Israelites (Levites, as well as common people), who
had treated the ark with less reverence than the Philistines
themselves.
he smote of the people fifty thousand and threescore and ten
men--Beth-shemesh being only a village, this translation must be
erroneous, and should be, "he smote fifty out of a thousand," being
only fourteen hundred in all who indulged this curiosity. God, instead
of decimating, according to an ancient usage, slew only a twentieth
part; that is, according to
JOSEPHUS, seventy out of fourteen hundred
(see
Nu 4:18-22).
21. Kirjath-jearim--"the city of woods," also called Kirjath-baal
(Jos 15:60; 18:14;
1Ch 13:6, 7).
This was the nearest town to Beth-shemesh; and being a place of
strength, it was a more fitting place for the residence of the ark.
Beth-shemesh being in a low plain, and Kirjath-jearim on a hill,
explains the message, "Come ye down, and fetch it up to you."
CHAPTER 7
1Sa 7:1, 2.
THE
ARK AT
KIRJATH-JEARIM.
1. the men of Kirjath-jearim--"the city of woods," also Kirjath-baal
(Jos 15:60; 18:14;
1Ch 13:5, 6).
It was the nearest town to Beth-shemesh and stood on a hill. This was
the reason of the message
(1Sa 6:21),
and why this was chosen for the convenience of people turning their
faces to the ark
(1Ki 8:29-35;
Ps 28:2;
Da 6:10).
brought it into the house of Abinadab in the hill--Why it was not
transported at once to Shiloh where the tabernacle and sacred vessels
were remaining, is difficult to conjecture.
sanctified . . . his son--He was not a Levite, and was therefore only
set apart or appointed to be keeper of the place.
2. the ark abode in Kirjath-jearim . . . twenty years--It appears, in
the subsequent history, that a much longer period elapsed before its
final removal from Kirjath-jearim
(2Sa 6:1-19;
1Ch 13:1-14).
But that length of time had passed when the Israelites began to revive
from their sad state of religious decline. The capture of the ark had
produced a general indifference either as to its loss or its recovery.
all the house of Israel lamented after the Lord--They were then
brought, doubtless by the influence of Samuel's exhortations, to
renounce idolatry, and to return to the national worship of the true
God.
1Sa 7:3-6.
THE
ISRAELITES, THROUGH
SAMUEL'S
INFLUENCE,
SOLEMNLY
REPENT AT
MIZPEH.
3-6. Samuel spake unto all the house of Israel--A great national
reformation was effected through the influence of Samuel. Disgusted
with their foreign servitude, and panting for the restoration of
liberty and independence, they were open to salutary impressions; and
convinced of their errors, they renounced idolatry. The
re-establishment of the faith of their fathers was inaugurated at a
great public meeting, held at Mizpeh in Judah, and hallowed by the
observance of impressive religious solemnities. The drawing water, and
pouring it out before the Lord, seems to have been a symbolical act by
which, in the people's name, Samuel testified their sense of national
corruption, their need of that moral purification of which water is the
emblem, and their sincere desire to pour out their hearts in repentance
before God.
6. Samuel judged . . . Israel in Mizpeh--At the time of Eli's death
he could not have much exceeded twenty years of age; and although his
character and position must have given him great influence, it does not
appear that hitherto he had done more than prophets were wont to do.
Now he entered on the duties of a civil magistrate.
1Sa 7:7-14.
WHILE
SAMUEL
PRAYS, THE
PHILISTINES
ARE
DISCOMFITED.
7-11. when the Philistines heard, &c.--The character and importance of
the national convention at Mizpeh were fully appreciated by the
Philistines. They discerned in it the rising spirit of religious
patriotism among the Israelites that was prepared to throw off the yoke
of their domination. Anxious to crush it at the first, they made a
sudden incursion while the Israelites were in the midst of their solemn
celebration. Unprepared for resistance, they besought Samuel to
supplicate the divine interposition to save them from their enemies.
The prophet's prayers and sacrifice were answered by such a tremendous
storm of thunder and lightning that the assailants, panic-struck, were
disordered and fled. The Israelites, recognizing the hand of God,
rushed courageously on the foe they had so much dreaded and committed
such immense havoc, that the Philistines did not for long recover from
this disastrous blow. This brilliant victory secured peace and
independence to Israel for twenty years, as well as the restitution of
the usurped territory.
12. Samuel took a stone, and set it between Mizpeh and Shen--on an open
spot between the town and "the crag" (some well-known rock in the
neighborhood). A huge stone pillar was erected as a monument of their
victory
(Le 26:1).
The name--Eben-ezer--is thought to have been written on the face of
it.
CHAPTER 8
1Sa 8:1-18.
OCCASIONED BY THE
ILL-GOVERNMENT OF
SAMUEL'S
SONS, THE
ISRAELITES
ASK A
KING.
1-5. when Samuel was old--He was now about fifty-four years of age,
having discharged the office of sole judge for twelve years. Unable,
from growing infirmities, to prosecute his circuit journeys through the
country, he at length confined his magisterial duties to Ramah and its
neighborhood
(1Sa 7:15),
delegating to his sons as his deputies the administration of justice in
the southern districts of Palestine, their provincial court being held
at Beer-sheba. The young men, however, did not inherit the high
qualities of their father. Having corrupted the fountains of justice
for their own private aggrandizement, a deputation of the leading men
in the country lodged a complaint against them in headquarters,
accompanied with a formal demand for a change in the government. The
limited and occasional authority of the judges, the disunion and
jealousy of the tribes under the administration of those rulers, had
been creating a desire for a united and permanent form of government;
while the advanced age of Samuel, together with the risk of his death
happening in the then unsettled state of the people, was the occasion
of calling forth an expression of this desire now.
6-10. the thing displeased Samuel when they said, Give us a king to
judge us--Personal and family feelings might affect his views of
this public movement. But his dissatisfaction arose principally from
the proposed change being revolutionary in its character. Though it
would not entirely subvert their theocratic government, the appointment
of a visible monarch would necessarily tend to throw out of view their
unseen King and Head. God intimated, through Samuel, that their request
would, in anger, be granted, while at the same time he apprised them of
some of the evils that would result from their choice.
11. This will be the manner of the king--The following is a very just
and graphic picture of the despotic governments which anciently and
still are found in the East, and into conformity with which the Hebrew
monarchy, notwithstanding the restrictions prescribed by the law,
gradually slid.
He will take your sons, and appoint them for himself--Oriental
sovereigns claim a right to the services of any of their subjects at
pleasure.
some shall run before his chariots--The royal equipages were, generally
throughout the East (as in Persia they still are), preceded and
accompanied by a number of attendants who ran on foot.
12. he will appoint him captains--In the East, a person must accept any
office to which he may be nominated by the king, however irksome it may
be to his taste or ruinous to his interests.
13. he will take your daughters to be confectionaries--Cookery, baking,
and the kindred works are, in Eastern countries, female employment, and
thousands of young women are occupied with these offices in the palaces
even of petty princes.
14-18. he will take your fields, &c.--The circumstances mentioned
here might be illustrated by exact analogies in the conduct of many
Oriental monarchs in the present day.
19-22. Nevertheless the people refused to obey the voice of
Samuel--They sneered at Samuel's description as a bugbear to frighten
them. Determined, at all hazards, to gain their object, they insisted
on being made like all the other nations, though it was their glory and
happiness to be unlike other nations in having the Lord for their King
and Lawgiver
(Nu 23:9;
De 33:28).
Their demand was conceded, for the government of a king had been
provided for in the law; and they were dismissed to wait the
appointment, which God had reserved to Himself
(De 17:14-20).
CHAPTER 9
1Sa 9:1-14.
SAUL,
DESPAIRING TO
FIND
HIS
FATHER'S
ASSES,
COMES TO
SAMUEL.
1. a mighty man of power--that is, of great wealth and substance. The
family was of high consideration in the tribe of Benjamin, and
therefore Saul's words must be set down among the common forms of
affected humility, which Oriental people are wont to use.
2. Saul, a choice young man, and a goodly--He had a fine appearance;
for it is evident that he must have been only a little under seven feet
tall. A gigantic stature and an athletic frame must have been a popular
recommendation at that time in that country.
3. the asses of Kish Saul's father were lost. And Kish said to Saul
. . . arise, go seek the asses--The probability is that the family of
Kish, according to the immemorial usage of Oriental shepherds in the
purely pastoral regions, had let the animals roam at large during the
grazing season, at the close of which messengers were despatched in
search of them. Such travelling searches are common; and, as each
owner has his own stamp marked on his cattle, the mention of it to the
shepherds he meets gradually leads to the discovery of the strayed
animals. This ramble of Saul's had nothing extraordinary in it, except
its superior directions and issue, which turned its uncertainty into
certainty.
4, 5. he passed through mount Ephraim--This being situated on the
north of Benjamin, indicates the direction of Saul's journey. The
district explored means the whole of the mountainous region, with its
valleys and defiles, which belonged to Ephraim. Turning apparently
southwards--probably through the verdant hills between Shiloh and the
vales of Jordan (Shalisha and Shalim)--he approached again the borders
of Benjamin, scoured the land of Zuph, and was proposing to return,
when his servant recollected that they were in the immediate
neighborhood of the man of God, who would give them counsel.
6. there is in this city a man of God--Ramah was the usual residence
of Samuel, but several circumstances, especially the mention of
Rachel's sepulchre, which lay in Saul's way homeward
[1Sa 10:2],
lead to the conclusion that "this city" was not the Ramah where Samuel
dwelt.
peradventure he can show us our way that we should go--It seems strange
that a dignified prophet should be consulted in such an affair. But it
is probable that at the introduction of the prophetic office, the seers
had discovered things lost or stolen, and thus their power for higher
revelations was gradually established.
7. Saul said to his servant, But, behold, if we go, what shall we bring
the man?--According to Eastern notions, it would be considered a want
of respect for any person to go into the presence of a superior man of
rank or of official station without a present of some kind in his hand,
however trifling in value.
the bread is spent in our vessels--Shepherds, going in quest of their
cattle, put up in a bag as much flour for making bread as will last
sometimes for thirty days. It appears that Saul thought of giving the
man of God a cake from his travelling bag, and this would have been
sufficient to render the indispensable act of civility--the customary
tribute to official dignity.
8. the fourth part of a shekel of silver--rather more than
sixpence. Contrary to our Western notions, money is in the East the
most acceptable form in which a present can be made to a man of
rank.
9. seer . . . Prophet--The recognized distinction in latter times was,
that a seer was one who was favored with visions of God--a view of
things invisible to mortal sight; and a prophet foretold future events.
11-13. as they went up the hill--The modern village, Er-Rameh, lies
on an eminence; and on their way they met a band of young maidens going
out to the well, which, like all similar places in Palestine, was
beyond the precincts of the town. From these damsels they learned that
the day was devoted to a festival occasion, in honor of which Samuel
had arrived in the city; that a sacrifice had been offered, which was
done by prophets in extraordinary circumstances at a distance from the
tabernacle, and that a feast was to follow--implying that it had been a
peace offering; and that, according to the venerable practice of the
Israelites, the man of God was expected to ask a special blessing on
the food in a manner becoming the high occasion.
14. Samuel came out against them, for to go up to the high place--Such
were the simple manners of the times that this prophet, the chief man
in Israel, was seen going to preside at a high festival undistinguished
either by his dress or equipage from any ordinary citizen.
1Sa 9:15-27.
GOD
REVEALS TO
SAMUEL
SAUL'S
COMING, AND
HIS
APPOINTMENT TO THE
KINGDOM.
15, 16. Now the Lord had told Samuel in his ear a day before--The
description of Saul, the time of his arrival, and the high office to
which he was destined, had been secretly intimated to Samuel from
heaven. The future king of Israel was to fight the battles of the Lord
and protect His people. It would appear that they were at this time
suffering great molestation from the Philistines, and that this was an
additional reason of their urgent demands for the appointment of a king
(see
1Sa 10:5; 13:3).
18-20. Tell me, I pray thee, where the seer's house is--Satisfying
the stranger's inquiry, Samuel invited him to the feast, as well as to
sojourn till the morrow; and, in order to reconcile him to the delay,
he assured him that the strayed asses had been recovered.
20, 21. on whom is all the desire of Israel? Is it not on thee, and on
all thy father's house?--This was a covert and indirect premonition
of the royal dignity that awaited him; and, though Saul's answer shows
that he fully understood it, he affected to doubt that the prophet was
in earnest.
21. And Saul answered and said, Am not I a Benjamite, of the smallest
of the tribes of Israel, &c.--By selecting a king from this least
and nearly extinct tribe
(Jud 20:46-48),
divine wisdom designed to remove all grounds of jealousy among the
other tribes.
22. Samuel took Saul and his servant, and brought them into the
parlour--The toil-worn but noble-looking traveller found himself
suddenly seated among the principal men of the place and treated as the
most distinguished guest.
24. the cook took up the shoulder . . . and set it before Saul. And
Samuel said, Behold that which is left; set it before thee, and
eat--that is, reserved
(see on
Ge 18:7;
Ge 43:34).
This was, most probably, the right shoulder;
which, as the perquisite of the sacrifice, belonged to Samuel, and
which he had set aside for his expected guest. In the sculptures of the
Egyptian shambles, also, the first joint taken off was always the right
shoulder for the priest. The meaning of those distinguished attentions
must have been understood by the other guests.
25-27. Samuel communed with Saul upon the top of the house--Saul was
taken to lodge with the prophet for that night. Before retiring to
rest, they communed on the flat roof of the house, the couch being laid
there
(Jos 2:6),
when, doubtless, Samuel revealed the secret and described the peculiar
duties of a monarch in a nation so related to the Divine King as
Israel. Next morning early, Samuel roused his guest, and conveying him
on his way towards the skirts of the city, sought, before parting, a
private interview--the object of which is narrated in the next
chapter.
CHAPTER 10
1Sa 10:1-27.
SAMUEL
ANOINTS
SAUL, AND
CONFIRMS
HIM BY THE
PREDICTION OF
THREE
SIGNS.
1. Then Samuel took a vial of oil--This was the ancient
(Jud 9:8)
ceremony of investiture with the royal office among the Hebrews and
other Eastern nations. But there were two unctions to the kingly
office; the one in private, by a prophet
(1Sa 16:13),
which was meant to be only a prophetic intimation of the person
attaining that high dignity--the more public and formal inauguration
(2Sa 2:4; 5:3)
was performed by the high priest, and perhaps with the holy oil, but
that is not certain. The first of a dynasty was thus anointed, but not
his heirs, unless the succession was disputed
(1Ki 1:39;
2Ki 11:12; 23:30;
2Ch 23:11).
kissed him--This salutation, as explained by the words that accompanied
it, was an act of respectful homage, a token of congratulation to the
new king
(Ps 2:12).
2. When thou art departed from me to-day--The design of these specific
predictions of what should be met with on the way, and the number and
minuteness of which would arrest attention, was to confirm Saul's
reliance on the prophetic character of Samuel, and lead him to give
full credence to what had been revealed to him as the word of God.
Rachel's sepulchre--near Beth-lehem
(see on
Ge 35:16).
Zelzah--or Zelah, now Bet-jalah, in the neighborhood of that
town.
3. the plain--or, "the oak of Tabor," not the celebrated mount, for
that was far distant.
three men going up to God to Beth-el--apparently to offer sacrifices
there at a time when the ark and the tabernacle were not in a settled
abode, and God had not yet declared the permanent place which He should
choose. The kids were for sacrifice, the loaves for the offering, and
the wine for the libations.
5. the hill of God--probably Geba
(1Sa 13:3),
so called from a school of the prophets being established there. The
company of prophets were, doubtless, the pupils at this seminary, which
had probably been instituted by Samuel, and in which the chief branches
of education taught were a knowledge of the law, and of psalmody with
instrumental music, which is called "prophesying" (here and in
1Ch 25:1, 7).
6. the Spirit of the Lord will come upon thee--literally, "rush
upon thee," suddenly endowing thee with a capacity and disposition to
act in a manner far superior to thy previous character and habits; and
instead of the simplicity, ignorance, and sheepishness of a peasant,
thou wilt display an energy, wisdom, and magnanimity worthy of a
prince.
8. thou shalt go down before me to Gilgal--This, according to
JOSEPHUS,
was to be a standing rule for the observance of Saul while the prophet
and he lived; that in every great crisis, such as a hostile incursion
on the country, he should repair to Gilgal, where he was to remain
seven days, to afford time for the tribes on both sides Jordan to
assemble, and Samuel to reach it.
9-11. when he had turned his back to go from Samuel, God gave him
another heart--Influenced by the words of Samuel, as well as by the
accomplishment of these signs, Saul's reluctance to undertake the
onerous office was overcome. The fulfilment of the two first signs
[1Sa 10:7, 8]
is passed over, but the third is specially described. The spectacle of
a man, though more fit to look after his father's cattle than to take
part in the sacred exercises of the young prophets--a man without any
previous instruction, or any known taste, entering with ardor into the
spirit, and skilfully accompanying the melodies of the sacred band, was
so extraordinary a phenomenon, that it gave rise to the proverb, "Is
Saul also among the prophets?" (see
1Sa 19:24).
The prophetic spirit had come upon him; and to Saul it was as personal
and experimental an evidence of the truth of God's word that had been
spoken to him, as converts to Christianity have in themselves from the
sanctifying power of the Gospel.
12. But who is their father?--The Septuagint reads, "Who is his
father?" referring to Saul the son of Kish.
17-25. Samuel called the people together . . . at Mizpeh--a shaft-like
hill near Hebron, five hundred feet in height. The national assemblies
of the Israelites were held there. A day having been appointed for the
election of a king, Samuel, after having charged the people with a
rejection of God's institution and a superseding of it by one of their
own, proceeded to the nomination of the new monarch. As it was of the
utmost importance that the appointment should be under the divine
direction and control, the determination was made by the miraculous
lot, tribes, families, and individuals being successively passed until
Saul was found. His concealment of himself must have been the result
either of innate modesty, or a sudden nervous excitement under the
circumstances. When dragged into view, he was seen to possess all those
corporeal advantages which a rude people desiderate in their
sovereigns; and the exhibition of which gained for the prince the
favorable opinion of Samuel also. In the midst of the national
enthusiasm, however, the prophet's deep piety and genuine patriotism
took care to explain "the manner of the kingdom," that is, the royal
rights and privileges, together with the limitations to which they were
to be subjected; and in order that the constitution might be ratified
with all due solemnity, the charter of this constitutional monarchy was
recorded and laid up "before the Lord," that is, deposited in the
custody of the priests, along with the most sacred archives of the
nation.
26. And Saul also went home to Gibeah--near Geba. This was his
place of residence (see
Jud 20:20),
about five miles north of Jerusalem.
there went . . . a band of men, whose hearts God had touched--who
feared God and regarded allegiance to their king as a conscientious
duty. They are opposed to "the children of Belial."
27. the children of Belial said, How shall this man save us? And they
despised him, and brought him no presents--In Eastern countries, the
honor of the sovereign and the splendor of the royal household are
upheld, not by a fixed rate of taxation, but by presents brought at
certain seasons by officials, and men of wealth, from all parts of the
kingdom, according to the means of the individual, and of a customary
registered value. Such was the tribute which Saul's opponents withheld,
and for want of which he was unable to set up a kingly establishment
for a while. But "biding his time," he bore the insult with a prudence
and magnanimity which were of great use in the beginning of his
government.
CHAPTER 11
1Sa 11:1-4.
NAHASH
OFFERS
THEM OF
JABESH-GILEAD A
REPROACHFUL
CONDITION.
1. Then Nahash the Ammonite came up--Nahash ("serpent"); (see
Jud 8:3).
The Ammonites had long claimed the right of original possession in
Gilead. Though repressed by Jephthah
(Jud 11:33),
they now, after ninety years, renew their pretensions; and it was the
report of their threatened invasion that hastened the appointment of a
king
(1Sa 12:12).
Make a covenant with us, and we will serve thee--They saw no prospect
of aid from the western Israelites, who were not only remote, but
scarcely able to repel the incursions of the Philistines from
themselves.
2. thrust out all your right eyes--literally, "scoop" or "hollow out"
the ball. This barbarous mutilation is the usual punishment of usurpers
in the East, inflicted on chiefs; sometimes, also, even in modern
history, on the whole male population of a town. Nahash meant to keep
the Jabeshites useful as tributaries, whence he did not wish to render
them wholly blind, but only to deprive them of their right eye, which
would disqualify them for war. Besides, his object was, through the
people of Jabesh-gilead, to insult the Israelitish nation.
3, 4. send messengers unto all the coasts of Israel--a curious proof
of the general dissatisfaction that prevailed as to the appointment of
Saul. Those Gileadites deemed him capable neither of advising nor
succoring them; and even in his own town the appeal was made to the
people--not to the prince.
1Sa 11:5-11.
THEY
SEND TO
SAUL, AND
ARE
DELIVERED.
7. he took a yoke of oxen, and hewed them in pieces--(see
Jud 19:29).
This particular form of war-summons was suited to the character and
habits of an agricultural and pastoral people. Solemn in itself, the
denunciation that accompanied it carried a terrible threat to those
that neglected to obey it. Saul conjoins the name of Samuel with his
own, to lend the greater influence to the measure, and to strike
greater terror unto all contemners of the order. The small contingent
furnished by Judah suggests that the disaffection to Saul was strongest
in that tribe.
8. Bezek--This place of general muster was not far from Shechem, on
the road to Beth-shan, and nearly opposite the ford for crossing to
Jabesh-gilead. The great number on the muster-roll showed the effect of
Saul's wisdom and promptitude.
11. on the morrow, that Saul put the people in three
companies--Crossing the Jordan in the evening, Saul marched his
army all night, and came at daybreak on the camp of the Ammonites, who
were surprised in three different parts, and totally routed. This
happened before the seven days' truce expired.
1Sa 11:12-15.
SAUL
CONFIRMED
KING.
12-15. the people said . . ., Who is he that said, Shall Saul reign
over us?--The enthusiastic admiration of the people, under the
impulse of grateful and generous feelings, would have dealt summary
vengeance on the minority who opposed Saul, had not he, either from
principle or policy, shown himself as great in clemency as in valor.
The calm and sagacious counsel of Samuel directed the popular feelings
into a right channel, by appointing a general assembly of the militia,
the really effective force of the nation, at Gilgal, where, amid great
pomp and religious solemnities, the victorious leader was confirmed in
his kingdom
[1Sa 11:15].
CHAPTER 12
1Sa 12:1-5.
SAMUEL
TESTIFIES HIS
INTEGRITY.
1-4. Samuel said unto all Israel--This public address was made after
the solemn re-instalment of Saul, and before the convention at Gilgal
separated. Samuel, having challenged a review of his public life,
received a unanimous testimony to the unsullied honor of his personal
character, as well as the justice and integrity of his public
administration.
5. the Lord is witness against you, and his anointed is witness--that,
by their own acknowledgment, he had given them no cause to weary of the
divine government by judges, and that, therefore, the blame of desiring
a change of government rested with themselves. This was only insinuated,
and they did not fully perceive his drift.
1Sa 12:6-16.
HE
REPROVES THE
PEOPLE FOR
INGRATITUDE.
7-16. Now therefore stand still, that I may reason with you--The burden
of this faithful and uncompromising address was to show them, that
though they had obtained the change of government they had so
importunely desired, their conduct was highly displeasing to their
heavenly King; nevertheless, if they remained faithful to Him and to
the principles of the theocracy, they might be delivered from many of
the evils to which the new state of things would expose them. And in
confirmation of those statements, no less than in evidence of the
divine displeasure, a remarkable phenomenon, on the invocation of the
prophet, and of which he gave due premonition, took place.
11. Bedan--The Septuagint reads "Barak"; and for "Samuel" some
versions read "Samson," which seems more natural than that the prophet
should mention himself to the total omission of the greatest of the
judges. (Compare
Heb 11:32).
1Sa 12:17-25.
HE
TERRIFIES
THEM WITH
THUNDER IN
HARVEST-TIME.
17-25. Is it not wheat harvest to-day?--That season in Palestine
occurs at the end of June or beginning of July, when it seldom or never
rains, and the sky is serene and cloudless. There could not, therefore,
have been a stronger or more appropriate proof of a divine mission than
the phenomenon of rain and thunder happening, without any prognostics
of its approach, upon the prediction of a person professing himself to
be a prophet of the Lord, and giving it as an attestation of his words
being true. The people regarded it as a miraculous display of divine
power, and, panic-struck, implored the prophet to pray for them.
Promising to do so, he dispelled their fears. The conduct of Samuel,
in this whole affair of the king's appointment, shows him to have been
a great and good man who sank all private and personal considerations
in disinterested zeal for his country's good and whose last words in
public were to warn the people, and their king, of the danger of
apostasy and disobedience to God.
CHAPTER 13
1Sa 13:1, 2.
SAUL'S
SELECTED
BAND.
1. Saul reigned one year--(see Margin). The transactions recorded
in the
eleventh and twelfth chapters
were the principal incidents comprising the first year of Saul's reign;
and the events about to be described in this happened in the second
year.
2. Saul chose him three thousand men of Israel--This band of picked
men was a bodyguard, who were kept constantly on duty, while the rest
of the people were dismissed till their services might be needed. It
seems to have been his tactics to attack the Philistine garrisons in
the country by different detachments, rather than by risking a general
engagement; and his first operations were directed to rid his native
territory of Benjamin of these enemies.
1Sa 13:3, 4.
HE
CALLS THE
HEBREWS TO
GILGAL AGAINST THE
PHILISTINES.
3, 4. And Jonathan--that is, "God-given."
smote the garrison of the Philistines . . . in Geba--Geba and
Gibeah were towns in Benjamin, very close to each other
(Jos 18:24, 28).
The word rendered "garrison" is different from that of
1Sa 13:23; 14:1,
and signifies, literally, something erected; probably a pillar or
flagstaff, indicative of Philistine ascendency. That the secret
demolition of this standard, so obnoxious to a young and noble-hearted
patriot, was the feat of Jonathan referred to, is evident from the
words, "the Philistines heard of it," which is not the way we should
expect an attack on a fortress to be noticed.
Saul blew the trumpet throughout all the land--This, a well-known
sound, was the usual Hebrew war-summons; the first blast was answered
by the beacon fire in the neighboring places. A second blast was
blown--then answered by a fire in a more distant locality, whence the
proclamation was speedily diffused over the whole country. As the
Philistines resented what Jonathan had done as an overt attempt to
throw off their yoke, a levy, en masse, of the people was immediately
ordered, the rendezvous to be the old camping-ground at Gilgal.
1Sa 13:5.
THE
PHILISTINES'
GREAT
HOST.
5. The Philistines gathered themselves together to fight with
Israel, thirty thousand chariots, and six thousand horsemen--Either
this number must include chariots of every kind--or the word "chariots"
must mean the men fighting in them
(2Sa 10:18;
1Ki 20:21;
1Ch 19:18);
or, as some eminent critics maintain, Sheloshim ("thirty"), has
crept into the text, instead of Shelosh ("three"). The gathering
of the chariots and horsemen must be understood to be on the Philistine
plain, before they ascended the western passes and pitched in the heart
of the Benjamite hills, in "Michmash," (now Mukmas), a "steep
precipitous valley" [ROBINSON], eastward from
Beth-aven (Beth-el).
1Sa 13:6-8.
THE
ISRAELITES'
DISTRESS.
6. When the men of Israel saw that they were in a strait--Though
Saul's gallantry was unabated, his subjects displayed no degree of zeal
and energy. Instead of venturing an encounter, they fled in all
directions. Some, in their panic, left the country
(1Sa 13:7),
but most took refuge in the hiding-places which the broken ridges of
the neighborhood abundantly afford. The rocks are perforated in every
direction with "caves," and "holes," and "pits"--crevices and fissures
sunk deep in the rocky soil, subterranean granaries or dry wells in the
adjoining fields. The name of Michmash ("hidden treasure") seems to be
derived from this natural peculiarity [STANLEY].
8. he--that is, Saul.
tarried seven days--He was still in the eastern borders of his kingdom,
in the valley of Jordan. Some bolder spirits had ventured to join the
camp at Gilgal; but even the courage of those stout-hearted men gave
way in prospect of this terrible visitation; and as many of them were
stealing away, he thought some immediate and decided step must be
taken.
1Sa 13:9-16.
SAUL,
WEARY OF
WAITING FOR
SAMUEL,
SACRIFICES.
9-14. Saul said, Bring hither a burnt offering to me, and peace
offerings--Saul, though patriotic enough in his own way, was more
ambitious of gaining the glory of a triumph to himself than ascribing
it to God. He did not understand his proper position as king of Israel;
and although aware of the restrictions under which he held the
sovereignty, he wished to rule as an autocrat, who possessed absolute
power both in civil and sacred things. This occasion was his first
trial. Samuel waited till the last day of the seven, in order to put
the constitutional character of the king to the test; and, as Saul, in
his impatient and passionate haste knowingly transgressed
(1Sa 13:12)
by invading the priest's office and thus showing his unfitness for his
high office (as he showed nothing of the faith of Gideon and other
Hebrew generals), he incurred a threat of the rejection which his
subsequent waywardness confirmed.
15, 16. Samuel . . . gat him . . . unto Gibeah . . . and Saul, and
Jonathan his son, and the people that were present with them, abode in
Gibeah--Saul removed his camp thither, either in the hope that, it
being his native town, he would gain an increase of followers or that
he might enjoy the counsels and influence of the prophet.
17, 18. the spoilers came out of the camp of the Philistines in three
companies--ravaging through the three valleys which radiate from
the uplands of Michmash to Ophrah on the north, through the pass of
Beth-horon on the west, and down the ravines of Zeboim
("the hyænas"), towards the Ghor or Jordan valley on the east.
19, 20. Now there was no smith found throughout . . . Israel--The
country was in the lowest state of depression and degradation. The
Philistines, after the great victory over the sons of Eli, had become
the virtual masters of the land. Their policy in disarming the natives
has been often followed in the East. For repairing any serious damage
to their agricultural implements, they had to apply to the neighboring
forts.
21. Yet they had a file--as a kind of privilege, for the purpose of
sharpening sundry smaller utensils of husbandry.
CHAPTER 14
1Sa 14:1-14.
JONATHAN
MIRACULOUSLY
SMITES THE
PHILISTINES'
GARRISON.
1. the Philistines' garrison--"the standing camp"
(1Sa 13:23,
Margin) "in the passage of Michmash"
(1Sa 13:16),
now Wady Es-Suweinit. "It begins in the neighborhood of Betin (Beth-el)
and El-Bireh (Beetroth), and as it breaks through the ridge below these
places, its sides form precipitous walls. On the right, about a quarter
of an acre below, it again breaks off, and passes between high
perpendicular precipices" [ROBINSON].
2. Saul tarried in the uttermost part of Gibeah--Hebrew, "Geba";
entrenched, along with Samuel and Ahiah the high priest, on the top of
one of the conical or spherical hills which abound in the Benjamite
territory, and favorable for an encampment, called Migron ("a
precipice").
4. between the passages--that is, the deep and great ravine of
Suweinit.
Jonathan sought to go over unto the Philistines' garrison--a distance
of about three miles running between two jagged points; Hebrew, "teeth
of the cliff."
there was a sharp rock on the one side, and a sharp rock on the other
side . . . Bozez--("shining") from the aspect of the chalky rock.
Seneh--("the thorn") probably from a solitary acacia on its top. They
are the only rocks of the kind in this vicinity; and the top of the crag
towards Michmash was occupied as the post of the Philistines. The two
camps were in sight of each other; and it was up the steep rocky sides
of this isolated eminence that Jonathan and his armorbearer
(1Sa 14:6)
made their adventurous approach. This enterprise is one of the most
gallant that history or romance records. The action, viewed in itself,
was rash and contrary to all established rules of military discipline,
which do not permit soldiers to fight or to undertake any enterprise
that may involve important consequences without the order of the
generals.
6. it may be that the Lord will work for us--This expression did not
imply a doubt; it signified simply that the object he aimed at was not
in his own power--but it depended upon God--and that he expected
success neither from his own strength nor his own merit.
9, 10. if they say, Come up unto us; then we will go up: for the Lord
hath delivered them into our hand--When Jonathan appears here to
prescribe a sign or token of God's will, we may infer that the same
spirit which inspired this enterprise suggested the means of its
execution, and put into his heart what to ask of God.
(See on
Ge 24:12).
11. Behold, the Hebrews come forth out of the holes--As it could not
occur to the sentries that two men had come with hostile designs, it
was a natural conclusion that they were Israelite deserters. And hence
no attempt was made to hinder their ascent, or stone them.
14, 15. that first slaughter, which Jonathan and his armour-bearer
made, was about twenty men, within as it were an half acre of land,
which a yoke of oxen might plow--This was a very ancient mode of
measurement, and it still subsists in the East. The men who saw them
scrambling up the rock had been surprised and killed, and the spectacle
of twenty corpses would suggest to others that they were attacked by a
numerous force. The success of the adventure was aided by a panic that
struck the enemy, produced both by the sudden surprise and the shock of
an earthquake. The feat was begun and achieved by the faith of
Jonathan, and the issue was of God.
16. the watchmen of Saul . . . looked--The wild disorder in the
enemies' camp was described and the noise of dismay heard on the heights
of Gibeah.
17-19. Then said Saul unto the people that were with him, Number
now, and see who is gone from us--The idea occurred to him that it
might be some daring adventurer belonging to his own little troop, and
it would be easy to discover him.
18. Saul said unto Ahiah, Bring hither the ark of God--There is no
evidence that the ark had been brought from Kirjath-jearim. The
Septuagint version is preferable; which, by a slight variation of
the text, reads, "the ephod"; that is, the priestly cape, which the
high priest put on when consulting the oracle. That this should be at
hand is natural, from the presence of Ahiah himself, as well as the
nearness of Nob, where the tabernacle was then situated.
19. Withdraw thine hand--The priest, invested with the ephod, prayed
with raised and extended hands. Saul perceiving that the opportunity
was inviting, and that God appeared to have sufficiently declared in
favor of His people, requested the priest to cease, that they might
immediately join in the contest. The season for consultation was
past--the time for prompt action was come.
20-22. Saul and all the people--All the warriors in the garrison at
Gibeah, the Israelite deserters in the camp of the Philistines, and the
fugitives among the mountains of Ephraim, now all rushed to the
pursuit, which was hot and sanguinary.
23. So the Lord saved Israel that day: and the battle passed over
unto Beth-aven--that is, "Beth-el." It passed over the forest, now
destroyed, on the central ridge of Palestine, then over to the other
side from the eastern pass of Michmash
(1Sa 14:31),
to the western pass of Aijalon, through which they escaped into their
own plains.
24. Saul had adjured the people--Afraid lest so precious an opportunity
of effectually humbling the Philistine power might be lost, the
impetuous king laid an anathema on any one who should taste food until
the evening. This rash and foolish denunciation distressed the people,
by preventing them taking such refreshments as they might get on the
march, and materially hindered the successful attainment of his own
patriotic object.
25. all they of the land came to a wood; and there was honey--The honey
is described as "upon the ground," "dropping" from the trees, and in
honeycombs--indicating it to be bees' honey. "Bees in the East are not,
as in England, kept in hives; they are all in a wild state. The forests
literally flow with honey; large combs may be seen hanging on the trees
as you pass along, full of honey" [ROBERTS].
31-34. the people were very faint. And the people flew upon the
spoil--at evening, when the time fixed by Saul had expired. Faint
and famishing, the pursuers fell voraciously upon the cattle they had
taken, and threw them on the ground to cut off their flesh and eat them
raw, so that the army, by Saul's rashness, were defiled by eating
blood, or living animals; probably, as the Abyssinians do, who cut a
part of the animal's rump, but close the hide upon it, and nothing
mortal follows from that wound. They were painfully conscientious in
keeping the king's order for fear of the curse, but had no scruple in
transgressing God's command. To prevent this violation of the law, Saul
ordered a large stone to be rolled, and those that slaughtered the oxen
to cut their throats on that stone. By laying the animal's head on the
high stone, the blood oozed out on the ground, and sufficient evidence
was afforded that the ox or sheep was dead before it was attempted to
eat it.
45. the people rescued Jonathan, that he died not--When Saul became
aware of Jonathan's transgression in regard to the honey, albeit it was
done in ignorance and involved no guilt, he was, like Jephthah
[Jud 11:31, 35],
about to put his son to death, in conformity with his vow
[1Sa 14:44].
But the more enlightened conscience of the army prevented the
tarnishing the glory of the day by the blood of the young hero, to
whose faith and valor it was chiefly due.
47, 48. So Saul . . . fought against all his enemies on every
side--This signal triumph over the Philistines was followed, not
only by their expulsion from the land of Israel, but by successful
incursions against various hostile neighbors, whom he harassed though
he did not subdue them.
CHAPTER 15
1Sa 15:1-6.
SAUL
SENT TO
DESTROY
AMALEK.
1. Samuel also said unto Saul, The Lord sent me to anoint thee . . .:
now therefore hearken thou unto . . . the Lord--Several years had been
passed in successful military operations against troublesome neighbors.
During these Saul had been left to act in a great measure at his own
discretion as an independent prince. Now a second test is proposed of
his possessing the character of a theocratic monarch in Israel; and in
announcing the duty required of him, Samuel brought before him his
official station as the Lord's vicegerent, and the peculiar obligation
under which he was laid to act in that capacity. He had formerly done
wrong, for which a severe rebuke and threatening were administered to
him
(1Sa 13:13, 14).
Now an opportunity was afforded him of retrieving that error by an
exact obedience to the divine command.
2, 3. Amalek--the powerful tribe which inhabited the country
immediately to the eastward of the northern Cushites. Their territory
extended over the whole of the eastern portion of the desert of Sinai
to Rephidim--the earliest opponent
(De 25:18;
Ex 17:8-16)
--the hereditary and restless enemy of Israel
(Nu 14:45;
Jud 3:13;
6:3),
and who had not repented
(1Sa 14:48)
of their bitter and sleepless hatred during the five hundred years that
had elapsed since their doom was pronounced. Being a people of nomadic
habits, they were as plundering and dangerous as the Bedouin Arabs,
particularly to the southern tribes. The national interest required,
and God, as KING OF ISRAEL,
decreed that this public enemy should be removed. Their destruction was
to be without reservation or exception.
I remember--I am reminded of what Amalek did--perhaps by the still
remaining trophy or memorial erected by Moses
(Ex 17:15, 16).
4. Saul gathered the people together--The alacrity with which he
entered on the necessary preparations for the expedition gave a fair,
but delusive promise of faithfulness in its execution.
Telaim--or Telem, among the uttermost cities of the tribe of Judah
towards the coast of Edom
(Jos 15:21, 24).
5. Saul came to a city of Amalek--probably their capital.
laid wait in the valley--following the strategic policy of Joshua at
Ai
(Jos 8:4).
6. Kenites--(See on
Jud 1:16).
In consequence, probably, of the unsettled state of Judah, they seem to
have returned to their old desert tracts. Though now intermingled with
the Amalekites, they were not implicated in the offenses of that wicked
race; but for the sake of their ancestors, between whom and those of
Israel there had been a league of amity, a timely warning was afforded
them to remove from the scene of danger.
1Sa 15:7-9.
HE
SPARES
AGAG AND THE
BEST OF THE
SPOIL.
7-9. Saul smote the Amalekites--His own view of the proper and
expedient course to follow was his rule, not the command of God.
8, 9. he took Agag . . . alive--This was the common title of the
Amalekite kings. He had no scruple about the apparent cruelty of it,
for he made fierce and indiscriminate havoc of the people. But he
spared Agag, probably to enjoy the glory of displaying so distinguished
a captive, and, in like manner, the most valuable portions of the
booty, as the cattle. By this wilful and partial obedience to a
positive command
[1Sa 15:3],
complying with it in some parts and violating it in others, as suited
his own taste and humor, Saul showed his selfish, arbitrary temper, and
his love of despotic power, and his utter unfitness to perform the
duties of a delegated king in Israel.
1Sa 15:10, 11.
GOD
REJECTS
HIS FOR
DISOBEDIENCE.
10, 11. Then came the word of the Lord unto Samuel, saying, It
repenteth me that I have set up Saul--Repentance is attributed in
Scripture to Him when bad men give Him cause to alter His course and
method of procedure, and to treat them as if He did "repent" of
kindness shown. To the heart of a man like Samuel, who was above all
envious considerations, and really attached to the king, so painful an
announcement moved all his pity and led him to pass a sleepless night
of earnest intercession.
12. Saul came to Carmel--in the south of Judah
(Jos 15:55;
1Sa 25:2).
he set him up a place--that is, a pillar
(2Sa 18:18);
literally, a hand, indicating that whatever was the form of the
monument, it was surmounted, according to the ancient fashion, by the
figure of a hand, the symbol of power and energy. The erection of this
vainglorious trophy was an additional act of disobedience. His pride
had overborne his sense of duty in first raising this monument to his
own honor, and then going to Gilgal to offer sacrifice to God.
13-23. Saul said unto him, Blessed be thou of the Lord: I have
performed the commandment of the Lord--Saul was either blinded by a
partial and delusive self-love, or he was, in his declaration to
Samuel, acting the part of a bold and artful hypocrite. He professed to
have fulfilled the divine command, and that the blame of any defects in
the execution lay with the people. Samuel saw the real state of the
case, and in discharge of the commission he had received before setting
out, proceeded to denounce his conduct as characterized by pride,
rebellion, and obstinate disobedience. When Saul persisted in declaring
that he had obeyed, alleging that the animals, whose bleating was
heard, had been reserved for a liberal sacrifice of thanksgiving to
God, his shuffling, prevaricating answer called forth a stern rebuke
from the prophet. It well deserved it--for the destination of the spoil
to the altar was a flimsy pretext--a gross deception, an attempt to
conceal the selfishness of the original motive under the cloak of
religious zeal and gratitude.
24-26. I have sinned . . . turn again with me, that I may worship the
Lord--The erring, but proud and obstinate monarch was now humbled.
He was conscience-smitten for the moment, but his confession proceeded
not from sincere repentance, but from a sense of danger and desire of
averting the sentence denounced against him. For the sake of public
appearance, he besought Samuel not to allow their serious differences
to transpire, but to join with him in a public act of worship. Under
the influence of his painfully agitated feelings, he designed to offer
sacrifice, partly to express his gratitude for the recent victory, and
partly to implore mercy and a reversal of his doom. It was, from
another angle, a politic scheme, that Samuel might be betrayed into a
countenancing of his design in reserving the cattle for sacrificing.
Samuel declined to accompany him.
I feared the people, and obeyed their voice--This was a different
reason from the former he had assigned. It was the language of a man
driven to extremities, and even had it been true, the principles
expounded by Samuel showed that it could have been no extenuation of
the offense. The prophet then pronounced the irreversible sentence of
the rejection of Saul and his family. He was judicially cut off for his
disobedience.
27, 28. he laid hold upon the skirt of his mantle--the moil, upper
tunic, official robe. In an agony of mental excitement, he took hold of
the prophet's dress to detain him; the rending of the mantle
[1Sa 15:27]
was adroitly pointed to as a significant and mystical representation of
his severance from the throne.
29. the Strength of Israel will not lie--Hebrew, "He that
gives a victory to Israel," a further rebuke of his pride in rearing
the Carmel trophy, and an intimation that no loss would be sustained in
Israel by his rejection.
31. Samuel turned again after Saul--not to worship along with him;
but first, that the people might have no ground, on pretense of Saul's
rejection, to withdraw their allegiance from him; and secondly, to
compensate for Saul's error, by executing God's judgment upon Agag.
32. Agag came unto him delicately--or cheerfully, since he had gained
the favor and protection of the king.
33. Samuel hewed Agag--This cruel tyrant met the retribution of a
righteous Providence. Never has it been unusual for great or official
personages in the East to perform executions with their own hands.
Samuel did it "before the Lord" in Gilgal, appointing that same mode of
punishment (hitherto unknown in Israel) to be used towards him, which
he had formerly used towards others.
CHAPTER 16
1Sa 16:1-10.
SAMUEL
SENT BY
GOD TO
BETHLEHEM.
1. the Lord said unto Samuel, How long wilt thou mourn for
Saul--Samuel's grief on account of Saul's rejection, accompanied,
doubtless, by earnest prayers for his restitution, showed the amiable
feelings of the man; but they were at variance with his public duty as
a prophet. The declared purpose of God to transfer the kingdom of
Israel into other hands than Saul's was not an angry menace, but a
fixed and immutable decree; so that Samuel ought to have sooner
submitted to the peremptory manifestation of the divine will. But to
leave him no longer room to doubt of its being unalterable, he was sent
on a private mission to anoint a successor to Saul
(see on
1Sa 10:1).
The immediate designation of a king was of the greatest importance for
the interests of the nation in the event of Saul's death, which, to
this time, was dreaded; it would establish David's title and comfort
the minds of Samuel and other good men with a right settlement,
whatever contingency might happen.
I have provided me a king--The language is remarkable, and intimates a
difference between this and the former king. Saul was the people's
choice, the fruit of their wayward and sinful desires for their own
honor and aggrandizement. The next was to be a king who would consult
the divine glory, and selected from that tribe to which the pre-eminence
had been early promised
(Ge 49:10).
2. How can I go?--This is another instance of human infirmity in
Samuel. Since God had sent him on this mission, He would protect him in
the execution.
I am come to sacrifice--It seems to have been customary with Samuel
to do this in the different circuits to which he went, that he might
encourage the worship of God.
3. call Jesse to the sacrifice--that is, the social feast that followed
the peace offering. Samuel, being the offerer, had a right to invite
any guest he pleased.
4. the elders of the town trembled at his coming--Beth-lehem was an
obscure town, and not within the usual circuit of the judge. The elders
were naturally apprehensive, therefore, that his arrival was occasioned
by some extraordinary reason, and that it might entail evil upon their
town, in consequence of the estrangement between Samuel and the king.
5. sanctify yourselves--by the preparations described
(Ex 19:14, 15).
The elders were to sanctify themselves. Samuel himself took the
greatest care in the sanctification of Jesse's family. Some, however,
think that the former were invited only to join in the sacrifice, while
the family of Jesse were invited by themselves to the subsequent
feast.
6-10. Samuel said, Surely the Lord's anointed is before him--Here
Samuel, in consequence of taking his impressions from the external
appearance, falls into the same error as formerly
(1Sa 10:24).
1Sa 16:11-14.
HE
ANOINTS
DAVID.
11. There remaineth yet the youngest, and, behold, he keepeth the
sheep--Jesse having evidently no idea of David's wisdom and bravery,
spoke of him as the most unfit. God, in His providence, so ordered it,
that the appointment of David might the more clearly appear to be a
divine purpose, and not the design either of Samuel or Jesse. David
having not been sanctified with the rest of his family, it is probable
that he returned to his pastoral duties the moment the special business
on which he had been summoned was done.
12. he was ruddy, &c.--JOSEPHUS
says that David was ten, while most
modern commentators are of the opinion that he must have been fifteen
years of age.
13. Then Samuel took the horn of oil, and anointed him--This
transaction must have been strictly private.
14-18. The Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul, and an evil spirit
from the Lord troubled him--His own gloomy reflections, the
consciousness that he had not acted up to the character of an
Israelitish king, the loss of his throne, and the extinction of his
royal house, made him jealous, irritable, vindictive, and subject to
fits of morbid melancholy.
19. Saul sent messengers unto Jesse, and said, Send me David--In the
East the command of a king is imperative; and Jesse, however reluctant
and alarmed, had no alternative but to comply.
20. Jesse took an ass laden with bread, and a bottle of wine, and a
kid, and sent them . . . unto Saul--as a token of homage and respect.
21. David came to Saul--Providence thus prepared David for his destiny,
by placing him in a way to become acquainted with the manners of the
court, the business of government, and the general state of the
kingdom.
became his armour-bearer--This choice, as being an expression of the
king's partiality, shows how honorable the office was held to be.
23. David took an harp, and played with his hand: so Saul was
refreshed, and was well--The ancients believed that music had a
mysterious influence in healing mental disorders.
CHAPTER 17
1Sa 17:1-3.
THE
ISRAELITES AND
PHILISTINES
BEING
READY TO
BATTLE.
1. the Philistines gathered together their armies--twenty-seven years
after their overthrow at Michmash. Having now recovered their spirits
and strength, they sought an opportunity of wiping out the infamy of
that national disaster, as well as to regain their lost ascendency over
Israel.
Shocoh--now Shuweikeh, a town in the western plains of Judah
(Jos 15:35),
nine Roman miles from Eleutheropolis, toward Jerusalem
[ROBINSON].
Azekah--a small place in the neighborhood.
Ephes-dammim--or, "Pas-dammim"
(1Ch 11:13),
"the portion" or "effusion of blood," situated between the other
two.
2. valley of Elah--that is, "the Terebinth," now Wady Er-Sumt
[ROBINSON].
Another valley somewhat to the north, now called Wady Beit
Hanina, has been fixed on by the tradition of ages.
1Sa 17:4-11.
GOLIATH
CHALLENGES A
COMBAT.
4-11. a champion--Hebrew, a "man between two"; that is, a
person who, on the part of his own people, undertook to determine the
national quarrel by engaging in single combat with a chosen warrior in
the hostile army.
5. helmet of brass--The Philistine helmet had the appearance of a
row of feathers set in a tiara, or metal band, to which were attached
scales of the same material, for the defense of the neck and the sides
of the face [OSBORN].
a coat of mail--a kind of corslet, quilted with leather or plates of
metal, reaching only to the chest, and supported by shoulder straps,
leaving the shoulders and arms at full liberty.
6. greaves of brass--boots, terminating at the ankle, made in one
plate of metal, but round to the shape of the leg, and often lined with
felt or sponge. They were useful in guarding the legs, not only against
the spikes of the enemy, but in making way among thorns and briers.
a target of brass--a circular frame, carried at the back, suspended
by a long belt which crossed the breast from the shoulders to the
loins.
7. staff of his spear--rather under five feet long, and capable of
being used as a javelin
(1Sa 19:10).
It had an iron head.
one bearing a shield--In consequence of their great size and weight,
the Oriental warrior had a trusty and skilful friend, whose office it
was to bear the large shield behind which he avoided the missile
weapons of the enemy. He was covered, cap-a-pie, with defensive armor,
while he had only two offensive weapons--a sword by his side and a
spear in his hand.
8-11. I defy the armies of Israel . . .; give me a man, that we may
fight together--In cases of single combat, a warrior used to go out
in front of his party, and advancing towards the opposite ranks,
challenge someone to fight with him. If his formidable appearance, or
great reputation for physical strength and heroism, deterred any from
accepting the challenge, he used to parade himself within hearing of
the enemy's lines, specify in a loud, boastful, bravado style, defying
them, and pouring out torrents of abuse and insolence to provoke their
resentment.
1Sa 17:12-58.
DAVID
ACCEPTS THE
CHALLENGE, AND
SLAYS
HIM.
17. Take now for thy brethren an ephah of this parched corn, and these
ten loaves--In those times campaigns seldom lasted above a few days
at a time. The soldiers were volunteers or militia, who were supplied
with provisions from time to time by their friends at home.
18. carry these ten cheeses to the captain--to enlist his kind
attention. Oriental cheeses are very small; and although they are
frequently made of so soft a consistence as to resemble curds, those
which David carried seem to have been fully formed, pressed, and
sufficiently dried to admit of their being carried.
take their pledge--Tokens of the soldiers' health and safety were
sent home in the convenient form of a lock of their hair, or piece of
their nail, or such like.
20. David left the sheep with a keeper--This is the only instance in
which the hired shepherd is distinguished from the master or one of his
family.
trench--some feeble attempt at a rampart. It appears (see Margin)
to have been formed by a line of carts or chariots, which, from the
earliest times, was the practice of nomad people.
22. left his carriage in the hand of the keeper of the carriage--to
make his way to the standard of Judah.
25. make his father's house free in Israel--His family should be
exempted from the impositions and services to which the general body of
the Israelites were subjected.
34-36. a lion, and a bear--There were two different rencontres, for
those animals prowl alone. The bear must have been a Syrian bear, which
is believed to be a distinct species, or perhaps a variety, of the
brown bear. The beard applies to the lion alone. Those feats seem to
have been performed with no weapons more effective than the rude staves
and stones of the field, or his shepherd's crook.
37. The Lord that delivered me--It would have been natural for a
youth, and especially an Oriental youth, to make a parade of his
gallantry. But David's piety sank all consideration of his own prowess
and ascribed the success of those achievements to the divine aid, which
he felt assured would not be withheld from him in a cause which so
intimately concerned the safety and honor of His people.
Saul said unto David, Go, and the Lord be with thee--The pious language
of the modest but valiant youth impressed the monarch's heart. He felt
that it indicated the true military confidence for Israel, and,
therefore, made up his mind, without any demur, to sanction a combat on
which the fate of his kingdom depended, and with a champion supporting
his interests apparently so unequal to the task.
38, 39. Saul armed David with his armour--The ancient Hebrews were
particularly attentive to the personal safety of their warriors, and
hence Saul equipped the youthful champion with his own defensive
accoutrements, which would be of the best style. It is probable that
Saul's coat of mail, or corslet, was a loose shirt, otherwise it could
not have fitted both a stripling and a man of the colossal stature of
the king.
40. brook--wady.
bag--or scrip for containing his daily food.
sling--The sling consisted of a double rope with a thong, probably of
leather, to receive the stone. The slinger held a second stone in his
left hand. David chose five stones, as a reserve, in case the first
should fail. Shepherds in the East carry a sling and stones still, for
the purpose of driving away, or killing, the enemies that prowl about
the flock.
42-47. the Philistine said . . . said David to the Philistine--When
the two champions met, they generally made each of them a speech, and
sometimes recited some verses, filled with allusions and epithets of
the most opprobrious kind, hurling contempt and defiance at one
another. This kind of abusive dialogue is common among the Arab
combatants still. David's speech, however, presents a striking contrast
to the usual strain of these invectives. It was full of pious trust,
and to God he ascribed all the glory of the triumph he anticipated.
49. smote the Philistine in his forehead--At the opening for the
eyes--that was the only exposed part of his body.
51. cut off his head--not as an evidence of the giant's death, for
his slaughter had been effected in presence of the whole army, but as a
trophy to be borne to Saul. The heads of slain enemies are always
regarded in the East as the most welcome tokens of victory.
52. Shaaraim--(See
Jos 15:36).
54. tent--the sacred tabernacle. David dedicated the sword of Goliath
as a votive offering to the Lord.
55-58. Saul . . . said unto Abner . . . whose son is this youth?--A
young man is more spoken of in many Eastern countries by his father's
name than his own. The growth of the beard, and other changes on a now
full-grown youth, prevented the king from recognizing his former
favorite minstrel
[1Sa 16:23].
CHAPTER 18
1Sa 18:1-4.
JONATHAN
LOVES
DAVID.
1. the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of David--They were
nearly of an age. The prince had taken little interest in David as a
minstrel; but his heroism and modest, manly bearing, his piety and high
endowments, kindled the flame not of admiration only, but of affection,
in the congenial mind of Jonathan.
2. Saul would let him go no more home--He was established as a
permanent resident at court.
3. Then Jonathan and David made a covenant--Such covenants of
brotherhood are frequent in the East. They are ratified by certain
ceremonies, and in presence of witnesses, that the persons covenanting
will be sworn brothers for life.
4. Jonathan stripped himself of the robe that was upon him, and gave
it to David--To receive any part of the dress which had been worn by a sovereign, or his eldest son and heir, is deemed, in the East, the
highest honor which can be conferred on a subject
(see on
Es 6:8).
The girdle, being connected with the sword and the bow, may be
considered as being part of the military dress, and great value is
attached to it in the East.
1Sa 18:5-9.
SAUL
ENVIES
HIS
PRAISE.
6. the women came out of all cities of Israel--in the homeward march
from the pursuit of the Philistines. This is a characteristic trait of
Oriental manners. On the return of friends long absent, and
particularly on the return of a victorious army, bands of women and
children issue from the towns and villages, to form a triumphal
procession, to celebrate the victory, and, as they go along, to gratify
the soldiers with dancing, instrumental music, and extempore songs, in
honor of the generals who have earned the highest distinction by feats
of gallantry. The Hebrew women, therefore, were merely paying the
customary gratulations to David as the deliverer of their country, but
they committed a great indiscretion by praising a subject at the
expense of their sovereign.
9. Saul eyed David--that is, invidiously, with secret and malignant
hatred.
1Sa 18:10-12.
SEEKS TO
KILL
HIM.
10. on the morrow, that the evil spirit from God came upon Saul--This
rankling thought brought on a sudden paroxysm of his mental malady.
he prophesied--The term denotes one under the influence either of a
good or a bad spirit. In the present it is used to express that Saul
was in a frenzy. David, perceiving the symptoms, hastened, by the
soothing strains of his harp, to allay the stormy agitation of the
royal mind. But before its mollifying influence could be felt, Saul
hurled a javelin at the head of the young musician.
there was a javelin in Saul's hand--Had it been followed by a fatal
result, the deed would have been considered the act of an irresponsible
maniac. It was repeated more than once ineffectually, and Saul became
impressed with a dread of David as under the special protection of
Providence.
1Sa 18:13-16.
FEARS
HIM FOR
HIS
GOOD
SUCCESS.
13. Therefore Saul removed him from him--sent him away from the
court, where the principal persons, including his own son, were
spellbound with admiration of the young and pious warrior.
made him captain over a thousand--gave him a military commission,
which was intended to be an honorable exile. But this post of duty
served only to draw out before the public the extraordinary and varied
qualities of his character, and to give him a stronger hold of the
people's affections.
1Sa 18:17-21.
HE
OFFERS
HIM
HIS
DAUGHTER FOR A
SNARE.
17. Saul said to David, Behold my elder daughter Merab, her will I
give thee to wife--Though bound to this already
[1Sa 17:25],
he had found it convenient to forget his former promise. He now holds
it out as a new offer, which would tempt David to give additional
proofs of his valor. But the fickle and perfidious monarch broke his
pledge at the time when the marriage was on the eve of being
celebrated, and bestowed Merab on another man (see on
2Sa 21:8);
an indignity as well as a wrong, which was calculated deeply to wound
the feelings and provoke the resentment of David. Perhaps it was
intended to do so, that advantage might be taken of his indiscretion.
But David was preserved from this snare.
20. Michal Saul's daughter loved David--This must have happened some
time after.
they told Saul, and the thing pleased him--Not from any favor to
David, but he saw that it would be turned to the advancement of his
malicious purposes, and the more so when, by the artful intrigues and
flattery of his spies, the loyal sentiments of David were discovered.
25. The king desireth not any dowry--In Eastern countries the husband
purchases his wife either by gifts or services. As neither David nor
his family were in circumstances to give a suitable dowry for a
princess, the king intimated that he would be graciously pleased to
accept some gallant deed in the public service.
a hundred foreskins of the Philistines--Such mutilations on the bodies
of their slain enemies were commonly practised in ancient war, and the
number told indicated the glory of the victory. Saul's willingness to
accept a public service had an air of liberality, while his choice of
so difficult and hazardous a service seemed only putting a proper value
on gaining the hand of a king's daughter. But he covered unprincipled
malice against David under this proposal, which exhibited a zeal for
God and the covenant of circumcision.
26. the days were not expired--The period within which this exploit was
to be achieved was not exhausted.
27. David . . . slew of the Philistines two hundred men--The number was
doubled, partly to show his respect and attachment to the princess, and
partly to oblige Saul to the fulfilment of his pledge.
29. Saul was yet the more afraid of David--because Providence had
visibly favored him, by not only defeating the conspiracy against his
life, but through his royal alliance paving his way to the throne.
CHAPTER 19
1Sa 19:1-7.
JONATHAN
DISCLOSES
HIS
FATHER'S
PURPOSE TO
KILL
DAVID.
1. Saul spake to Jonathan his son, and to all his servants, that they
should kill David--The murderous design he had secretly cherished
he now reveals to a few of his intimate friends. Jonathan was among the
number. He prudently said nothing at the time, but secretly apprised
David of his danger; and waiting till the morning, when his father's
excited temper would be cooled, he stationed his friend in a place of
concealment, where, overhearing the conversation, he might learn how
matters really stood and take immediate flight, if necessary.
4-7. Jonathan spake good of David--He told his father he was committing
a great sin to plot against the life of a man who had rendered the most
invaluable services to his country and whose loyalty had been uniformly
steady and devoted. The strong remonstrances of Jonathan produced an
effect on the impulsive mind of his father. As he was still susceptible
of good and honest impressions, he bound himself by an oath to
relinquish his hostile purpose; and thus, through the intervention of
the noble-minded prince, a temporary reconciliation was effected, in
consequence of which David was again employed in the public service.
1Sa 19:8-17.
SAUL'S
MALICIOUS
RAGE
BREAKS
OUT AGAINST
DAVID.
8-10. David went out, and fought with the Philistines, and slew them
with a great slaughter--A brilliant victory was gained over the public
enemy. But these fresh laurels of David reawakened in the moody breast
of Saul the former spirit of envy and melancholy. On David's return to
court, the temper of Saul became more fiendish than ever; the melodious
strains of the harp had lost all their power to charm; and in a
paroxysm of uncontrollable frenzy he aimed a javelin at the person of
David--the missile having been thrown with such force that it pierced
the chamber wall. David providentially escaped; but the king, having
now thrown off the mask and being bent on aggressive measures, made his
son-in-law's situation everywhere perilous.
11, 12. Saul sent messengers unto David's house, to watch him, and to
slay him--The fear of causing a commotion in the town, or favoring his
escape in the darkness, seemed to have influenced the king in ordering
them to patrol till the morning. This infatuation was overruled by
Providence to favor David's escape; for his wife, secretly apprised by
Jonathan, who was aware of the design, or by spying persons in court
livery watching the gate, let him down through a window
(see on
Jos 2:15).
13, 14. And Michal took an image, and laid it in the bed--"an image,"
literally, "the teraphim," and laid, not in the bed, but literally on
the "divan"; and "the pillows," that is, the cushion, which usually
lay at the back of the divan and was stuffed with "goat's hair," she
took from its bolster or heading at the upper part of the divan. This
she placed lower down, and covered with a mantle, as if to foster a
proper warmth in a patient; at the same time spreading the goat's hair
skin, so as to resemble human hair in a dishevelled state. The pretext
was that David lay there sick. The first messengers of Saul, keeping at
a respectable distance, were deceived; but the imposition was detected
on a closer inspection.
15. Bring him to me in the bed--a portable couch or mattress.
1Sa 19:18-23.
DAVID
FLEES TO
SAMUEL.
18-23. David fled, . . . and came to Samuel to Ramah--Samuel was living
in great retirement, superintending the school of the prophets,
established in the little hamlet of Naioth, in the neighborhood of
Ramah. It was a retreat congenial to the mind of David; but Saul,
having found out his asylum, sent three successive bodies of men to
apprehend him. The character of the place and the influence of the
sacred exercises produced such an effect on them that they were
incapable of discharging their commission, and were led, by a
resistless impulse, to join in singing the praises of God. Saul, in a
fit of rage and disappointment, determined to go himself. But, before
reaching the spot, his mental susceptibilities were roused even more
than his messengers, and he was found, before long, swelling the ranks
of the young prophets. This singular change can be ascribed only to the
power of Him who can turn the hearts of men even as the rivers of
water.
1Sa 19:24.
SAUL
PROPHESIES.
24. lay down naked--that is, divested of his armor and outer robes--in
a state of trance. Thus God, in making the wrath of man to praise Him,
preserved the lives of all the prophets, frustrated all the purposes of
Saul, and preserved the life of His servant.
CHAPTER 20
1Sa 20:1-10.
DAVID
CONSULTS WITH
JONATHAN FOR
HIS
SAFETY.
1-3. David fled from Naioth in Ramah, and came and said before
Jonathan--He could not remain in Naioth, for he had strong reason to
fear that when the religious fit, if we may so call it, was over, Saul
would relapse into his usual fell and sanguinary temper. It may be
thought that David acted imprudently in directing his flight to Gibeah.
But he was evidently prompted to go thither by the most generous
feelings--to inform his friend of what had recently occurred, and to
obtain that friend's sanction to the course he was compelled to adopt.
Jonathan could not be persuaded there was any real danger after the
oath his father had taken; at all events, he felt assured his father
would do nothing without telling him. Filial attachment naturally
blinded the prince to defects in the parental character and made him
reluctant to believe his father capable of such atrocity. David
repeated his unshaken convictions of Saul's murderous purpose, but in
terms delicately chosen
(1Sa 20:3),
not to wound the filial feelings of his friend; while Jonathan,
clinging, it would seem, to a hope that the extraordinary scene enacted
at Naioth might have wrought a sanctified improvement on Saul's temper
and feelings, undertook to inform David of the result of his
observations at home.
5. David said unto Jonathan, Behold, to-morrow the new moon, and I
should not fail to sit with the king at meat--The beginning of a new
month or moon was always celebrated by special sacrifices, followed by
feasting, at which the head of a family expected all its members to be
present. David, both as the king's son-in-law and a distinguished
courtier, dined on such occasions at the royal table, and from its
being generally known that David had returned to Gibeah, his presence
in the palace would be naturally expected. This occasion was chosen by
the two friends for testing the king's state of feeling. As a suitable
pretext for David's absence, it was arranged that he should visit his
family at Beth-lehem, and thus create an opportunity of ascertaining how
his non-appearance would be viewed. The time and place were fixed for
Jonathan reporting to David; but as circumstances might render another
interview unsafe, it was deemed expedient to communicate by a concerted
signal.
1Sa 20:11-23.
THEIR
COVENANT
RENEWED BY
OATH.
11. Jonathan said to David, Come, let us go into the field--The
private dialogue, which is here detailed at full length, presents a
most beautiful exhibition of these two amiable and noble-minded
friends. Jonathan was led, in the circumstances, to be the chief
speaker. The strength of his attachment, his pure disinterestedness,
his warm piety, his invocation to God (consisting of a prayer and a
solemn oath combined), the calm and full expression he gave of his
conviction that his own family were, by the divine will, to be
disinherited, and David elevated to the possession of the throne, the
covenant entered into with David on behalf of his descendants, and the
imprecation
(1Sa 20:16)
denounced on any of them who should violate his part of the conditions,
the reiteration of this covenant on both sides
(1Sa 20:17)
to make it indissoluble--all this indicates such a power of mutual
affection, such magnetic attractiveness in the character of David, such
susceptibility and elevation of feeling in the heart of Jonathan, that
this interview for dramatic interest and moral beauty stands unrivalled
in the records of human friendship.
19. when thou hast stayed three days--either with your family at
Beth-lehem, or wherever you find it convenient.
come to the place where thou didst hide thyself when the business was
in hand--Hebrew, "in the day," or "time of the business," when
the same matter was under inquiry formerly
(1Sa 19:22).
remain by the stone Ezel--Hebrew, "the stone of the way"; a sort
of milestone which directed travellers. He was to conceal himself in
some cave or hiding-place near that spot.
23. as touching the matter which thou and I have spoken of--The plan
being concerted, the friends separated for a time, and the amiable
character of Jonathan again peers out in his parting allusion to their
covenant of friendship.
1Sa 20:24-40.
SAUL,
MISSING
DAVID,
SEEKS TO
KILL
JONAHAN.
25. the king sat upon his seat, as at other times . . . by the
wall--The left-hand corner at the upper end of a room was and still
is in the East, the most honorable place. The person seated there has
his left arm confined by the wall, but his right hand is at full
liberty. From Abner's position next the king, and David's seat being
left empty, it would seem that a state etiquette was observed at the
royal table, each of the courtiers and ministers having places assigned
them according to their respective gradations of rank.
Jonathan arose--either as a mark of respect on the entrance of the
king, or in conformity with the usual Oriental custom for a son to
stand in presence of his father.
26. he is not clean--No notice was taken of David's absence, as he
might be laboring under some ceremonial defilement.
27. on the morrow, which was the second day of the month--The time of
the moon's appearance being uncertain--whether at midday, in the
evening, or at midnight, the festival was extended over two days.
Custom, not the law, had introduced this.
Saul said unto Jonathan his son, Wherefore cometh not the son of
Jesse--The question was asked, as it were, casually, and with as great
an air of indifference as he could assume. And Jonathan having replied
that David had asked and obtained his permission to attend a family
anniversary at Beth-lehem
[Ac 20:28, 29],
the pent-up passions of the king burst out in a most violent storm of
rage and invective against his son.
30. Thou son of the perverse rebellious woman--This is a striking
Oriental form of abuse. Saul was not angry with his wife; it was the
son alone, upon whom he meant, by this style of address, to discharge
his resentment. The principle on which it is founded seems to be, that
to a genuine filial instinct it is a more inexpiable offense to hear
the name or character of a parent traduced, than any personal reproach.
This was, undoubtedly, one cause of "the fierce anger" in which the
high-minded prince left the table without tasting a morsel.
33. Saul cast a javelin at him--This is a sad proof of the maniacal
frenzy into which the unhappy monarch was transported.
35. Jonathan went out into the field at the time appointed--or,
"at the place appointed."
36. he said unto his lad, Run, find out now the arrows which I
shoot--The direction given aloud to the attendant was the signal
preconcerted with David. It implied danger.
40. Jonathan gave his artillery unto his lad--that is, his missive
weapons. The French word artillerie, signifies "archery." The term
is still used in England, in the designation of the "artillery company
of London," the association of archers, though they have long disused
bows and arrows. Jonathan's boy being despatched out of the way, the
friends enjoyed the satisfaction of a final meeting.
1Sa 20:41, 42.
JONATHAN AND
DAVID
LOVINGLY
PART.
41, 42. David . . . fell on his face to the ground, and bowed three
times--a token of homage to the prince's rank; but on a close
approach, every other consideration was sunk in the full flow of the
purest brotherly affection.
42. Jonathan said to David, Go in peace--The interview being a stolen
one, and every moment precious, it was kindness in Jonathan to hasten
his friend's departure.
CHAPTER 21
1Sa 21:1-7.
DAVID, AT
NOB,
OBTAINS OF
AHIMELECH
HALLOWED
BREAD.
1. Then came David to Nob to Ahimelech--Nob, a city of the priests
(1Sa 22:19),
was in the neighborhood of Jerusalem, on the Mount of Olives--a little
north of the top, and on the northeast of the city. It is computed to
have been about five miles distant from Gibeah. Ahimelech, the same as
Ahiah, or perhaps his brother, both being sons of Ahitub (compare
1Sa 14:3,
with 1Sa 22:4-11, 20).
His object in fleeing to this place was partly for the supply of his
necessities, and partly for comfort and counsel, in the prospect of
leaving the kingdom.
Ahimelech was afraid at the meeting of David--suspecting some
extraordinary occurrence by his appearing so suddenly, and in such a
style, for his attendants were left at a little distance.
2. The king hath commanded me a business, and hath said unto me, Let
no man know--This was a direct falsehood, extorted through fear. David
probably supposed, like many other persons, that a lie is quite
excusable which is told for the sole purpose of saving the speaker's
life. But what is essentially sinful, can never, from circumstances,
change its immoral character; and David had to repent of this vice of
lying
(Ps 119:29).
4. there is hallowed bread--There would be plenty of bread in his
house; but there was no time to wait for it. "The hallowed bread" was
the old shew-bread, which had been removed the previous day, and which
was reserved for the use of the priests alone
(Le 24:9).
Before entertaining the idea that this bread could be lawfully given to
David and his men, the high priest seems to have consulted the oracle
(1Sa 22:10)
as to the course to be followed in this emergency. A dispensation to
use the hallowed bread was specially granted by God Himself.
5. these three days--as required by law
(Ex 19:15).
David and his attendants seem to have been lurking in some of the
adjoining caves, to elude pursuit, and to have been, consequently,
reduced to great extremities of hunger.
the bread is in a manner common--that is, now that it is no longer
standing on the Lord's table. It is eaten by the priests, and may also,
in our circumstances, be eaten by us.
yea, though it were sanctified this day in the vessel--that is,
though the hallowed bread had been but newly placed on the vessel, the
ritual ordinance would have to yield to the great law of necessity and
mercy (see on
Mt 12:3;
also see
Mr 2:25;
Lu 6:3).
6. there was no bread there--in the tabernacle. The removal of the
old and the substitution of the new bread was done on the Sabbath
(Le 24:8),
the loaves being kept warm in an oven heated the previous day.
7. Doeg, an Edomite--who had embraced the Hebrew religion.
detained before the Lord--at the tabernacle, perhaps, in the
performance of a vow, or from its being the Sabbath, which rendered it
unlawful for him to prosecute his journey.
the chiefest of the herdmen that belonged to Saul--Eastern monarchs
anciently had large possessions in flocks and herds; and the office of
the chief shepherd was an important one.
1Sa 21:9.
HE
TAKES
GOLIATH'S
SWORD.
9. sword of Goliath--(See on
1Sa 17:54).
behind the ephod--in the place allowed for keeping the sacred
vestments, of which the ephod is mentioned as the chief. The giant's
sword was deposited in that safe custody as a memorial of the divine
goodness in delivering Israel.
There is none like that--not only for its size and superior temper,
but for its being a pledge of the divine favor to him, and a constant
stimulus to his faith.
1Sa 21:10-15.
AT
GATH
HE
FEIGNS
HIMSELF
MAD.
10. David . . . fled . . . to Achish the king of Gath--which was one
of the five principalities of the Philistines. In this place his person
must have been known, and to venture into that country, he their
greatest enemy, and with the sword of Goliath in his hand, would seem
to have been a perilous experiment; but, doubtless, the protection he
received implies that he had been directed by the divine oracle. Achish
was generous
(1Sa 27:6).
He might wish to weaken the resources of Saul, and it was common in
ancient times for great men to be harbored by neighboring princes.
13. feigned himself mad--It is supposed to have been an attack of
epilepsy, real or perhaps only pretended. This disease is relieved by
foaming at the mouth.
let his spittle fall down upon his beard--No wonder that Achish
supposed him insane, as such an indignity, whether done by another, or
one's self, to the beard, is considered in the East an intolerable
insult.
CHAPTER 22
1Sa 22:1-8.
DAVID'S
KINDRED AND
OTHERS
RESORT TO
HIM AT
ADULLAM.
1. David . . . escaped to the cave Adullam--supposed to be that now
called Deir-Dubban, a number of pits or underground vaults, some nearly
square, and all about fifteen or twenty feet deep, with perpendicular
sides, in the soft limestone or chalky rocks. They are on the borders
of the Philistine plain at the base of the Judea mountains, six miles
southwest from Beth-lehem, and well adapted for concealing a number of
refugees.
his brethren and all his father's house . . . went down--to escape the
effects of Saul's rage, which seems to have extended to all David's
family. From Beth-lehem to Deir-Dubban it is, indeed, a descent all the
way.
2. every one that was in
distress--(See on
Jud 11:3).
3. David went thence to Mizpeh of Moab--"Mizpeh" signifies a
watchtower, and it is evident that it must be taken in this sense here,
for it is called "the hold" or fort
(1Sa 22:4).
The king of Moab was an enemy of Saul
(1Sa 14:47),
and the great-grandson of Ruth, of course, was related to the family of
Jesse. David, therefore, had less anxiety in seeking an asylum within
the dominions of this prince than those of Achish, because the Moabites
had no grounds for entertaining vindictive feelings against him, and
their enmity, to Saul rendered them the more willing to receive so
illustrious a refugee from his court.
5. the prophet Gad said unto David, Abide not in the hold--This sound
advice, no doubt, came from a higher source than Gad's own sagacity. It
was right to appear publicly among the people of his own tribe, as one
conscious of innocence and trusting in God; and it was expedient that,
on the death of Saul, his friends might be encouraged to support his
interest.
forest of Hareth--southwest of Jerusalem.
6. Saul abode . . . under a tree in Ramah--literally, "under a grove
on a hill." Oriental princes frequently sit with their court under some
shady canopy in the open air. A spear was the early scepter.
7, 8. Hear now, ye Benjamites--This was an appeal to stimulate the
patriotism or jealousy of his own tribe, from which he insinuated it
was the design of David to transfer the kingdom to another. This
address seems to have been made on hearing of David's return with his
four hundred men to Judah. A dark suspicion had risen in the jealous
mind of the king that Jonathan was aware of this movement, which he
dreaded as a conspiracy against the crown.
1Sa 22:9-16.
DOEG
ACCUSES
AHIMELECH.
9. Doeg . . . set over the servants--Septuagint, "the mules of
Saul."
10. he inquired of the Lord for him--Some suppose that this was a
malicious fiction of Doeg to curry favor with the king, but Ahimelech
seems to acknowledge the fact. The poor simple-minded high priest knew
nothing of the existing family feud between Saul and David. The
informer, if he knew it, said nothing of the cunning artifice by which
David obtained the aid of Ahimelech. The facts looked against him,
and the whole priesthood along with him were declared abettors of
conspiracy
[1Sa 22:16, 17].
1Sa 22:17-19.
SAUL
COMMANDS TO
KILL THE
PRIESTS.
17, 18. the footmen that stood about him--his bodyguard, or his
runners
(1Sa 8:11;
2Sa 15:1;
1Ki 1:5;
1Ki 14:28),
who held an important place at court
(2Ch 12:10).
But they chose rather to disobey the king than to offend God by
imbruing their hands in the blood of his ministering servants. A
foreigner alone
(Ps 52:1-3)
could be found willing to be the executioner of this bloody and
sacrilegious sentence. Thus was the doom of the house of Eli fulfilled
[1Sa 2:30-36].
19. Nob, the city of the priests, smote he with the edge of the
sword--The barbarous atrocities perpetrated against this city seem
to have been designed to terrify all the subjects of Saul from
affording either aid or an asylum to David. But they proved ruinous to
Saul's own interest, as they alienated the priesthood and disgusted all
good men in the kingdom.
1Sa 22:20-23.
ABIATHAR
ESCAPES AND
FLEES AFTER
DAVID.
20-23. one of the sons of Ahimelech . . . escaped--This was Abiathar,
who repaired to David in the forest of Hareth, rescuing, with his own
life, the high priest's vestments
(1Sa 23:6, 9).
On hearing his sad tale, David declared that he had dreaded such a
fatal result from the malice and intriguing ambition of Doeg; and,
accusing himself as having been the occasion of all the disaster to
Abiathar's family, David invited him to remain, because, firmly
trusting himself in the accomplishment of the divine promise, David
could guarantee protection to him.
CHAPTER 23
1Sa 23:1-6.
DAVID
RESCUES
KEILAH.
1. Then they told David--rather, "now they had told"; for this
information had reached him previous to his hearing
(1Sa 23:6)
of the Nob tragedy.
Keilah--a city in the west of Judah
(Jos 15:44),
not far from the forest of Hareth.
and they rob the threshing-floors--These were commonly situated on
the fields and were open to the wind
(Jud 6:11;
Ru 3:2).
2-5. David inquired of the Lord--most probably through Gad
(2Sa 24:11;
1Ch 21:9),
who was present in David's camp
(1Sa 22:5),
probably by the recommendation of Samuel. To repel unprovoked assaults
on unoffending people who were engaged in their harvest operations, was
a humane and benevolent service. But it was doubtful how far it was
David's duty to go against a public enemy without the royal commission;
and on that account he asked, and obtained, the divine counsel. A demur
on the part of his men led David to renew the consultation for their
satisfaction; after which, being fully assured of his duty, he
encountered the aggressors and, by a signal victory, delivered the
people of Keilah from further molestation.
6. an ephod--in which was the Urim and Thummim
(Ex 28:30).
It had, probably, been committed to his care, while Ahimelech and the
other priests repaired to Gibeah, in obedience to the summons of
Saul.
1Sa 23:7-13.
SAUL'S
COMING, AND
TREACHERY OF THE
KEILITES.
7. it was told Saul that David was come to Keilah--Saul imagined
himself now certain of his victim, who would be hemmed within a
fortified town. The wish was father to the thought. How wonderfully
slow and unwilling to be convinced by all his experience, that the
special protection of Providence shielded David from all his snares!
8. Saul called all the people together to war--not the united tribes
of Israel, but the inhabitants of the adjoining districts. This force
was raised, probably, on the ostensible pretext of opposing the
Philistines, while, in reality, it was secretly to arouse mischief
against David.
9. he said to Abiathar the priest, Bring hither the ephod--The
consultation was made, and the prayer uttered, by means of the priest.
The alternative conditions here described have often been referred to
as illustrating the doctrine of God's foreknowledge and preordination
of events.
1Sa 23:14-18.
DAVID
ESCAPES TO
ZIPH.
14, 15. David abode in the wilderness . . . of Ziph--A mountainous and
sequestered region was generally called a wilderness, and took its name
from some large town in the district. Two miles southeast of Hebron,
and in the midst of a level plain, is Tell-ziph, an isolated and
conical hillock, about a hundred feet high, probably the acropolis
[VAN
DE
VELDE], or the ruins
[ROBINSON] of the ancient city of Ziph,
from which the surrounding wilderness was called. It seems, anciently,
to have been covered by an extensive woods. The country has for
centuries lost its woods and forests, owing to the devastations caused
by man.
16, 17. Jonathan went to David into the wood, and strengthened his
hand in God--by the recollection of their mutual covenant. What a
victory over natural feelings and lower considerations must the faith
of Jonathan have won, before he could seek such an interview and give
utterance to such sentiments! To talk with calm and assured confidence
of himself and family being superseded by the man who was his friend by
the bonds of a holy and solemn covenant, could only have been done by
one who, superior to all views of worldly policy, looked at the course
of things in the spirit and through the principles of that theocracy
which acknowledged God as the only and supreme Sovereign of Israel.
Neither history nor fiction depicts the movements of a friendship
purer, nobler, and more self-denying than Jonathan's!
1Sa 23:19-29.
SAUL
PURSUES
HIM.
19-23. Then came up the Ziphites to Saul to Gibeah, saying, Doth not
David hide himself with us?--From the tell of Ziph a panorama of the
whole surrounding district is to be seen. No wonder, then, that the
Ziphites saw David and his men passing to and fro in the mountains of
the wilderness. Spying him at a distance when he ventured to show
himself on the hill of Hachilah, "on the right hand of the wilderness,"
that is, the south side of Ziph, they sent in haste to Saul, to tell
him of the lurking place of his enemy
[VAN
DE
VELDE].
25. David . . . came down into a rock, and abode in the wilderness of
Maon--Tell Main, the hillock on which was situated the ancient Maon
(Jos 15:55),
and from which the adjoining wilderness took its name, is one mile
north, ten east from Carmel. The mountain plateau seems here to end. It
is true the summit ridge of the southern hills runs out a long way
further towards the southwest; but towards the southeast the ground
sinks more and more down to a tableland of a lower level, which is
called "the plain to the right hand [that is, to the south] of the
wilderness" [VAN DE VELDE].
29. David went up from thence, and dwelt in strong holds at
En-gedi--that is, "the spring of the wild goats or gazelles"--a name
given to it from the vast number of ibexes or Syrian chamois which
inhabit these cliffs on the western shore of the Dead Sea
(Jos 15:62).
It is now called Ain Jiddy. On all sides the country is full of
caverns, which might then serve as lurking places for David and his
men, as they do for outlaws at the present day [ROBINSON].
CHAPTER 24
1Sa 24:1-7.
DAVID IN A
CAVE AT
ENGEDI
CUTS
OFF
SAUL'S
SKIRT, BUT
SPARES
HIS
LIFE.
2. Saul . . . went . . . to seek David . . . upon the rocks of the
wild goats--Nothing but the blind infatuation of fiendish rage
could have led the king to pursue his outlawed son-in-law among those
craggy and perpendicular precipices, where were inaccessible hiding
places. The large force he took with him seemed to give him every
prospect of success. But the overruling providence of God frustrated
all his vigilance.
3. he came to the sheepcotes--most probably in the upper ridge
of Wady Chareitun. There a large cave--I am quite disposed to say
the cave--lies hardly five minutes to the east of the village
ruin, on the south side of the wady. It is high upon the side of the
calcareous rock, and it has undergone no change since David's time. The
same narrow natural vaulting at the entrance; the same huge natural
chamber in the rock, probably the place where Saul lay down to rest in
the heat of the day; the same side vaults, too, where David and his men
were concealed. There, accustomed to the obscurity of the cavern, they
saw Saul enter, while, blinded by the glare of the light outside, he
saw nothing of him whom he so bitterly persecuted.
4-7. the men of David said . . . Behold the day of which the Lord said
unto thee, Behold, I will deliver thine enemy into thine hand--God had
never made any promise of delivering Saul into David's hand; but, from
the general and repeated promises of the kingdom to him, they concluded
that the king's death was to be effected by taking advantage of some
such opportunity as the present. David steadily opposed the urgent
instigations of his followers to put an end to his and their troubles
by the death of their persecutor (a revengeful heart would have
followed their advice, but David rather wished to overcome evil with
good, and heap coals of fire upon his head); he, however, cut off a
fragment from the skirt of the royal robe. It is easy to imagine how
this dialogue could be carried on and David's approach to the king's
person could have been effected without arousing suspicion. The bustle
and noise of Saul's military men and their beasts, the number of cells
or divisions in these immense caverns (and some of them far interior)
being enveloped in darkness, while every movement could be seen at the
cave's mouth--the probability that the garment David cut from might
have been a loose or upper cloak lying on the ground, and that Saul
might have been asleep--these facts and presumptions will be sufficient
to account for the incidents detailed.
1Sa 24:8-15.
HE
URGES
THEREBY
HIS
INNOCENCY.
8-15. David also arose . . . and went out of the cave, and cried after
Saul--The closeness of the precipitous cliffs, though divided by deep
wadies, and the transparent purity of the air enable a person standing
on one rock to hear distinctly the words uttered by a speaker standing
on another
(Jud 9:7).
The expostulation of David, followed by the visible tokens he furnished
of his cherishing no evil design against either the person or the
government of the king, even when he had the monarch in his power,
smote the heart of Saul in a moment and disarmed him of his fell
purpose of revenge. He owned the justice of what David said,
acknowledged his own guilt, and begged kindness to his house. He seems
to have been naturally susceptible of strong, and, as in this instance,
of good and grateful impressions. The improvement of his temper,
indeed, was but transient--his language that of a man overwhelmed by
the force of impetuous emotions and constrained to admire the conduct,
and esteem the character, of one whom he hated and dreaded. But God
overruled it for ensuring the present escape of David. Consider his
language and behavior. This language--"a dead dog," "a flea," terms by
which, like Eastern people, he strongly expressed a sense of his
lowliness and the entire committal of his cause to Him who alone is the
judge of human actions, and to whom vengeance belongs, his steady
repulse of the vindictive counsels of his followers; the relentings of
heart which he felt even for the apparent indignity he had done to the
person of the Lord's anointed; and the respectful homage he paid the
jealous tyrant who had set a price on his head--evince the magnanimity
of a great and good man, and strikingly illustrate the spirit and
energy of his prayer "when he was in the cave"
(Ps 142:1).
CHAPTER 25
1Sa 25:1-9.
SAMUEL
DIES.
1. Samuel died--After a long life of piety and public usefulness,
he left behind him a reputation which ranks him among the greatest of
Scripture worthies.
buried him in his house at Ramah--that is, his own mausoleum. The
Hebrews took as great care to provide sepulchers anciently as people do
in the East still, where every respectable family has its own house of
the dead. Often this is in a little detached garden, containing a
small stone building (where there is no rock), resembling a house,
which is called the sepulcher of the family--it has neither door nor
window.
David arose, and went down to the wilderness of Paran--This removal
had probably no connection with the prophet's death; but was probably
occasioned by the necessity of seeking provision for his numerous
followers.
the wilderness of Paran--stretching from Sinai to the borders of
Palestine in the southern territories of Judea. Like other
wildernesses, it presented large tracts of natural pasture, to which
the people sent their cattle at the grazing season, but where they were
liable to constant and heavy depredations by prowling Arabs. David and
his men earned their subsistence by making reprisals on the cattle of
these freebooting Ishmaelites; and, frequently for their useful
services, they obtained voluntary tokens of acknowledgment from the
peaceful inhabitants.
2. in Carmel--now Kurmul. The district takes its name from this town,
now a mass of ruins; and about a mile from it is Tell Main, the hillock
on which stood ancient Maon.
the man was very great--His property consisted in cattle, and he was
considered wealthy, according to the ideas of that age.
3. he was of the house of Caleb--of course, of the same tribe with
David himself; but many versions consider Caleb ("dog") not as a
proper, but a common noun, and render it, "he was snappish as a dog."
4-9. Nabal did shear his sheep, and David sent out ten young men,
&c.--David and his men lurked in these deserts, associating with the
herdsmen and shepherds of Nabal and others and doing them good offices,
probably in return for information and supplies obtained through them.
Hence when Nabal held his annual sheep-shearing in Carmel, David felt
himself entitled to share in the festival and sent a message,
recounting his own services and asking for a present. "In all these
particulars we were deeply struck with the truth and strength of the
biblical description of manners and customs almost identically the same
as they exist at the present day. On such a festive occasion, near a
town or village, even in our own time, an Arab sheik of the neighboring
desert would hardly fail to put in a word either in person or by
message; and his message, both in form and substance, would be only a
transcript of that of David" [ROBINSON].
1Sa 25:10-13.
THE
CHURLISH
ANSWER
PROVOKES
HIM.
10-12. Nabal answered David's servants, . . . Who is David?
&c.--Nabal's answer seems to indicate that the country was at the time
in a loose and disorderly state. David's own good conduct, however, as
well as the important services rendered by him and his men, were
readily attested by Nabal's servants. The preparations of David to
chastise his insolent language and ungrateful requital are exactly what
would be done in the present day by Arab chiefs, who protect the cattle
of the large and wealthy sheep masters from the attacks of the
marauding border tribes or wild beasts. Their protection creates a
claim for some kind of tribute, in the shape of supplies of food and
necessaries, which is usually given with great good will and gratitude;
but when withheld, is enforced as a right. Nabal's refusal, therefore,
was a violation of the established usages of the place.
13. two hundred abode by the stuff--This addition to his followers
was made after his return into Judah (see
1Sa 22:2).
1Sa 25:14-35.
ABIGAIL
PACIFIES
HIM.
14-18. Then Abigail made haste--The prudence and address of Nabal's
wife were the means of saving him and family from utter destruction.
She acknowledged the demand of her formidable neighbors; but justly
considering, that to atone for the insolence of her husband, a greater
degree of liberality had become necessary, she collected a large amount
of food, accompanying it with the most valued products of the country.
bottles--goatskins, capable of holding a great quantity.
parched corn--It was customary to eat parched corn when it was
fully grown, but not ripe.
19. she said unto her servants, Go on before me; behold, I come after
you--People in the East always try to produce an effect by their
presents, loading on several beasts what might be easily carried by
one, and bringing them forward, article by article, in succession.
Abigail not only sent her servants in this way, but resolved to go in
person, following her present, as is commonly done, to watch the
impression which her munificence would produce.
23. she hasted, and lighted off the ass, and fell before David on her
face--Dismounting in presence of a superior is the highest token of
respect that can be given; and it is still an essential act of homage
to the great. Accompanying this act of courtesy with the lowest form of
prostration, she not only by her attitude, but her language, made the
fullest amends for the disrespect shown by her husband, as well as paid
the fullest tribute of respect to the character and claims of David.
25. Nabal--signifying fool, gave pertinence to his wife's remark.
26. let thine enemies . . . be as Nabal--be as foolish and contemptible
as he.
29. the soul of my lord shall be bound in the bundle of life with the
Lord thy God--An Orientalism, expressing the perfect security of
David's life from all the assaults of his enemies, under the protecting
shield of Providence, who had destined him for high things.
32-35. David said to Abigail, Blessed be the Lord--Transported by
passion and blinded by revenge, he was on the eve of perpetrating a
great injury. Doubtless, the timely appearance and prudent address of
Abigail were greatly instrumental in changing his purpose. At all
events, it was the means of opening his eyes to the moral character of
the course on which he had been impetuously rushing; and in accepting
her present, he speaks with lively satisfaction as well as gratitude to
Abigail, for having relieved him from bloodshed.
1Sa 25:36-44.
NABAL'S
DEATH.
36. he held a feast in his house, like the feast of a king--The
sheep-shearing season was always a very joyous occasion. Masters
usually entertained their shepherds; and even Nabal, though of a most
niggardly disposition, prepared festivities on a scale of sumptuous
liberality. The modern Arabs celebrate the season with similar
hilarity.
37, 38. in the morning . . . his wife had told him these things, that
his heart died within him--He probably fainted from horror at the
perilous situation in which he had unconsciously placed himself; and
such a shock had been given him by the fright to his whole system, that
he rapidly pined and died.
39-42. the Lord hath returned the wickedness of Nabal upon his own
head--If this was an expression of pleasure, and David's vindictive
feelings were gratified by the intelligence of Nabal's death, it was an
instance of human infirmity which we may lament; but perhaps he
referred to the unmerited reproach
(1Sa 25:10, 11),
and the contempt of God implied in it.
David sent and communed with Abigail, to take her to wife--This
unceremonious proceeding was quite in the style of Eastern monarchs,
who no sooner take a fancy for a lady than they despatch a messenger to
intimate their royal wishes that she should henceforth reside in the
palace; and her duty is implicitly to obey. David's conduct shows that
the manners of the Eastern nations were already imitated by the great
men in Israel; and that the morality of the times which God permitted,
gave its sanction to the practice of polygamy. His marriage with
Abigail brought him a rich estate.
44. Michal--By the unchallengeable will of her father, she who was
David's wife was given to another. But she returned and sustained the
character of his wife when he ascended the throne.
CHAPTER 26
1Sa 26:1-4.
SAUL
COMES TO THE
HILL OF
HACHILAH AGAINST
DAVID.
1, 2. the Ziphites came unto Saul to Gibeah--This people seem to have
thought it impossible for David to escape, and therefore recommended
themselves to Saul, by giving him secret information
(see on
1Sa 23:19).
The knowledge of their treachery makes it appear strange that David
should return to his former haunt in their neighborhood; but, perhaps
he did it to be near Abigail's possessions, and under the impression
that Saul had become mollified. But the king had relapsed into his old
enmity. Though Gibeah, as its name imports, stood on an elevated
position, and the desert of Ziph, which was in the hilly region of
Judea, may have been higher than Gibeah, it was still necessary to
descend in leaving the latter place; thence Saul
(1Sa 26:2)
"went down to the wilderness of Ziph."
4, 5. David . . . sent out spies . . . and David arose, and came to the
place where Saul had pitched--Having obtained certain information of
the locality, he seems, accompanied by his nephew
(1Sa 26:6),
to have hid himself, perhaps disguised, in a neighboring wood, or hill,
on the skirts of the royal camp towards night, and waited to approach
it under covert of the darkness.
1Sa 26:5-25.
DAVID
STAYS
ABISHAI FROM
KILLING
SAUL, BUT
TAKES
HIS
SPEAR AND
CRUSE.
5. Saul lay in the trench, and the people pitched round about
him--Among the nomad people of the East, the encampments are
usually made in a circular form. The circumference is lined by the
baggage and the men, while the chief's station is in the center,
whether he occupy a tent or not. His spear, stuck in the ground,
indicates his position. Similar was the disposition of Saul's camp--in
this hasty expedition he seems to have carried no tent, but to have
slept on the ground. The whole troop was sunk in sleep around him.
8-12. Then said Abishai to David, God hath delivered thine enemy into
thine hand--This midnight stratagem shows the activity and heroic
enterprise of David's mind, and it was in unison with the style of
warfare in ancient times.
let me smite him . . . even to the earth at once--The ferocious
vehemence of the speaker is sufficiently apparent from his language,
but David's magnanimity soared far above the notions of his followers.
Though Saul's cruelty and perfidy and general want of right principle
had sunk him to a low pitch of degradation, yet that was no reason for
David's imitating him in doing wrong. Besides, he was the sovereign;
David was a subject. Though God had rejected him from the kingdom, it
was in every way the best and most dutiful course, instead of
precipitating his fall by imbruing their hands in his blood and thereby
contracting the guilt of a great crime, to wait the awards of that
retributive providence which sooner or later would take him off by some
sudden and mortal blow. He who, with impetuous haste was going to
exterminate Nabal, meekly spared Saul. But Nabal refused to give a
tribute to which justice and gratitude, no less than custom, entitled
David. Saul was under the judicial infatuation of heaven. Thus David
withheld the hand of Abishai; but, at the same time, he directed him to
carry off some things which would show where they had been, and what
they had done. Thus he obtained the best of victories over him, by
heaping coals of fire on his head.
11. the spear that is at his bolster, and the cruse of water--The
Oriental spear had, and still has, a spike at the lower extremity,
intended for the purpose of sticking the spear into the ground when the
warrior is at rest. This common custom of Arab sheiks was also the
practice of the Hebrew chiefs.
at his bolster--literally, "at his head"; perhaps, Saul as a sovereign
had the distinguished luxury of a bolster carried for him. A "cruse of
water" is usually, in warm climates, kept near a person's couch, as a
drink in the night time is found very refreshing. Saul's cruse would
probably be of superior materials, or more richly ornamented than
common ones, and therefore by its size or form be easily distinguished.
13-20. Then David . . . stood on the top of an hill afar off . . .
and cried to the
people--(See on
Jud 9:7).
The extraordinary purity and elasticity of the air in Palestine enable
words to be distinctly heard that are addressed by a speaker from the
top of one hill to people on that of another, from which it is
separated by a deep intervening ravine. Hostile parties can thus speak
to each other, while completely beyond the reach of each other's
attack. It results from the peculiar features of the country in many of
the mountain districts.
15. David said to Abner, Art not thou a valiant man: . . . wherefore
then hast thou not kept thy lord the king?--The circumstance of David
having penetrated to the center of the encampment, through the circular
rows of the sleeping soldiers, constituted the point of this sarcastic
taunt. This new evidence of David's moderation and magnanimous
forbearance, together with his earnest and kindly expostulation,
softened the obduracy of Saul's heart.
19. If the Lord have stirred thee up against me--By the evil spirit
He had sent, or by any spiritual offenses by which we have mutually
displeased Him.
let him accept an offering--that is, let us conjointly offer a
sacrifice for appeasing His wrath against us.
if they be the children of men--The prudence, meekness, and address
of David in ascribing the king's enmity to the instigations of some
malicious traducers, and not to the jealousy of Saul himself, is worthy
of notice.
saying, Go, serve other gods--This was the drift of their conduct.
By driving him from the land and ordinances of the true worship, into
foreign and heathen countries, they were exposing him to all the
seductions of idolatry.
20. as when one doth hunt a partridge--People in the East, in hunting
the partridge and other game birds, pursue them, till observing them
becoming languid and fatigued after they have been put up two or three
times, they rush upon the birds stealthily and knock them down with
bludgeons [SHAW, Travels].
It was exactly in this manner that Saul
was pursuing David. He drove him from time to time from his
hiding-place, hoping to render him weary of his life, or obtain an
opportunity of accomplishing his destruction.
25. So David went on his way--Notwithstanding this sudden relenting
of Saul, David placed no confidence in his professions or promises, but
wisely kept at a distance and awaited the course of Providence.
CHAPTER 27
1Sa 27:1-4.
SAUL
HEARING
THAT
DAVID
WAS
FLED TO
GATH,
SEEKS
NO
MORE FOR
HIM.
1. David said in his heart, . . . there is nothing better for me than
that I should speedily escape into the land of the Philistines--This
resolution of David's was, in every respect, wrong: (1) It was removing
him from the place where the divine oracle intimated him to remain
(1Sa 22:5);
(2) It was rushing into the idolatrous land, for driving him into which
he had denounced an imprecation on his enemies
(1Sa 26:19);
(3) It was a withdrawal of his counsel and aid from God's people. It
was a movement, however, overruled by Providence to detach him from his
country and to let the disasters impending over Saul and his followers
be brought on by the Philistines.
2, 3. Achish, the son of Maoch, king of Gath--The popular description
of this king's family creates a presumption that he was a different
king from the reigning sovereign on David's first visit to Gath.
Whether David had received a special invitation from him or a mere
permission to enter his territories, cannot be determined. It is
probable that the former was the case. From the universal notoriety
given to the feud between Saul and David, which had now become
irreconcilable, it might appear to Achish good policy to harbor him as
a guest, and so the better pave the way for the hostile measures
against Israel which the Philistines were at this time meditating.
1Sa 27:5-12.
DAVID
BEGS
ZIKLAG OF
ACHISH.
5. let them give me a place in some town in the country--It was a
prudent arrangement on the part of David; for it would prevent him
being an object of jealous suspicion, or of mischievous plots among the
Philistines. It would place his followers more beyond the risk of
contamination by the idolatries of the court and capital; and it would
give him an opportunity of making reprisals on the freebooting tribes
that infested the common border of Israel and the Philistines.
6. Ziklag--Though originally assigned to Judah
(Jos 15:31),
and subsequently to Simeon
(Jos 19:5),
this town had never been possessed by the Israelites. It belonged to
the Philistines, who gave it to David.
8. David . . . went up, and invaded the
Geshurites--(See
Jos 13:2).
and the Gezrites--or the Gerizi
[GESENIUS],
(Jos 12:12),
some Arab horde which had once encamped there.
and the Amalekites--Part of the district occupied by them lay on the
south of the land of Israel
(Jud 5:14; 12:15).
10. Achish said, Whither have ye made a road to-day?--that is,
raid, a hostile excursion for seizing cattle and other booty.
David said, Against the south of Judah, and against the south of the
Jerahmeelites--Jerahmeel was the great-grandson of Judah, and his
posterity occupied the southern portion of that tribal domain.
the south of the Kenites--the posterity of Jethro, who occupied the
south of Judah
(Jud 1:16;
Nu 24:21).
The deceit practised upon his royal host and the indiscriminate
slaughter committed, lest any one should escape to tell the tale,
exhibit an unfavorable view of this part of David's history.
CHAPTER 28
1Sa 28:1-6.
ACHISH'S
CONFIDENCE IN
DAVID.
1. The Philistines gathered their armies together for warfare, to fight
with Israel--The death of Samuel, the general dissatisfaction with
Saul, and the absence of David, instigated the cupidity of those
restless enemies of Israel.
Achish said to David, Know thou assuredly, that thou shalt go out with
me to battle--This was evidently to try him. Achish, however, seems to
have thought he had gained the confidence of David and had a claim on
his services.
2. Surely thou shalt know what thy servant can do--This answer, while
it seemed to express an apparent cheerfulness in agreeing to the
proposal, contained a studied ambiguity--a wary and politic generality.
Therefore will I make thee keeper of mine head for ever--or, "my life";
that is, "captain of my bodyguard," an office of great trust and high
honor.
3. Now Samuel is dead, &c.--This event is here alluded to as affording
an explanation of the secret and improper methods by which Saul sought
information and direction in the present crisis of his affairs.
Overwhelmed in perplexity and fear, he yet found the common and
legitimate channels of communication with Heaven shut against him. And
so, under the impulse of that dark, distempered, superstitious spirit
which had overmastered him, he resolved, in desperation, to seek the
aid of one of those fortune telling impostors whom, in accordance with
the divine command
(Le 19:31;
20:6, 27;
De 18:11),
he had set himself formerly to exterminate from his kingdom.
4. the Philistines . . . pitched in Shunem--Having collected their
forces for a last grand effort, they marched up from the seacoast and
encamped in the "valley of Jezreel." The spot on which their encampment
was fixed was Shunem
(Jos 19:18),
now Sulem, a village which still exists on the slope of a range called
"Little Hermon." On the opposite side, on the rise of Mount Gilboa,
hard by "the spring of Jezreel," was Saul's army--the Israelites,
according to their wont, keeping to the heights, while their enemies
clung to the plain.
1Sa 28:7-25.
SAUL
SEEKS A
WITCH,
WHO,
BEING
ENCOURAGED BY
HIM,
RAISES
UP
SAMUEL.
7, 8. Then said Saul unto his servants, Seek me a woman that hath a
familiar spirit--From the energetic measures which he himself had
taken for extirpating the dealers in magical arts (the profession
having been declared a capital offense), his most attached courtiers
might have had reason to doubt the possibility of gratifying their
master's wish. Anxious inquiries, however, led to the discovery of a
woman living very secluded in the neighborhood, who had the credit of
possessing the forbidden powers. To her house he repaired by night in
disguise, accompanied by two faithful servants.
En-dor--"the fountain of the circle" (that figure being constantly
affected by magicians) was situated directly on the other side of the
Gilboa range, opposite Tabor; so that, in this midnight adventure, Saul
had to pass over the shoulder of the ridge on which the Philistines
were encamped.
8-14. bring me him up, whom I shall name unto thee--This pythoness
united to the arts of divination a claim to be a necromancer
(De 18:11);
and it was her supposed power in calling back the dead of which Saul
was desirous to avail himself. Though she at first refused to listen to
his request, she accepted his pledge that no risk would be incurred by
her compliance. It is probable that his extraordinary stature, the
deference paid him by his attendants, the easy distance of his camp
from En-dor, and the proposal to call up the great prophet and first
magistrate in Israel (a proposal which no private individual would
venture to make), had awakened her suspicions as to the true character
and rank of her visitor. The story has led to much discussion whether
there was a real appearance of Samuel or not. On the one hand, the
woman's profession, which was forbidden by the divine law, the refusal
of God to answer Saul by any divinely constituted means, the well-known
age, figure, and dress of Samuel, which she could easily represent
herself, or by an accomplice--his apparition being evidently at some
distance, being muffled, and not actually seen by Saul, whose attitude
of prostrate homage, moreover, must have prevented him distinguishing
the person though he had been near, and the voice seemingly issuing out
of the ground, and coming along to Saul--and the vagueness of the
information, imparted much which might have been reached by natural
conjecture as to the probable result of the approaching conflict--the
woman's representation--all of this has led many to think that this was
a mere deception. On the other hand, many eminent writers (considering
that the apparition came before her arts were put in practice; that she
herself was surprised and alarmed; that the prediction of Saul's own
death and the defeat of his forces was confidently made), are of
opinion that Samuel really appeared.
24. the woman had a fat calf . . . and she hasted, and killed it,
&c.--(See on
Ge 18:1-8).
25. Then they rose up, and went away that night--Exhausted by long
abstinence, overwhelmed with mental distress, and now driven to
despair, the cold sweat broke on his anxious brow, and he sank helpless
on the ground. But the kind attentions of the woman and his servants
having revived him, he returned to the camp to await his doom.
CHAPTER 29
1Sa 29:1-5.
DAVID
MARCHING WITH THE
PHILISTINES TO
FIGHT WITH
ISRAEL.
1. Aphek--
(Jos 12:8),
in the tribe of Issachar, and in the plain of Esdraelon. A person who
compares the Bible account of Saul's last battle with the Philistines,
with the region around Gilboa, has the same sort of evidence that the
account relates what is true, that a person would have that such a
battle as Waterloo really took place. Gilboa, Jezreel, Shunem, En-dor,
are all found, still bearing the same names. They lie within sight of
each other. Aphek is the only one of the cluster not yet identified.
Jezreel on the northern slope of Gilboa, and at the distance of twenty
minutes to the east, is a large fountain, and a smaller one still
nearer; just the position which a chieftain would select, both on
account of its elevation and the supply of water needed for his troops
[HACKETT, Scripture Illustrated].
2. David and his men passed on in the rereward with Achish--as the
commander of the lifeguards of Achish, who was general of this invading
army of the Philistines.
3. these days, or these years--He had now been with the Philistines
a full year and four months
(1Sa 27:7),
and also some years before. It has been thought that David kept up a
private correspondence with this Philistine prince, either on account
of his native generosity, or in the anticipation that an asylum in his
territories would sooner or later be needed.
4. the princes of the Philistines were wroth with him--It must be
considered a happy circumstance in the overruling providence of God to
rescue David out of the dangerous dilemma in which he was now placed.
But David is not free from censure in his professions to Achish
(1Sa 29:8),
to do what he probably had not the smallest purpose of doing--of
fighting with Achish against his enemies. It is just an instance of the
unhappy consequences into which a false step--a departure from the
straight course of duty--will betray everyone who commits it.
9. notwithstanding the princes of the Philistines have said--The
Philistine government had constitutional checks--or at least the king
was not an absolute sovereign; but his authority was limited--his
proceedings liable to be controlled by "the powerful barons of that
rude and early period--much as the kings of Europe in the Middle Ages
were by the proud and lawless aristocracy which surrounded them"
[CHALMERS].
CHAPTER 30
1Sa 30:1-5.
THE
AMALEKITES
SPOIL
ZIKLAG.
1. Amalekites had invaded the south, and Ziklag, and smitten
Ziklag--While the strength of the Philistine forces was poured out
of their country into the plain of Esdraelon, the Amalekite marauders
seized the opportunity of the defenseless state of Philistia to invade
the southern territory. Of course, David's town suffered from the
ravages of these nomad plunderers, in revenge for his recent raid upon
their territory.
2. they slew not any, either great or small, but carried them
away--Their conduct seems to stand in favorable contrast to that of
David
(1Sa 27:11).
But their apparent clemency did not arise from humane considerations.
It is traceable to the ancient war usages of the East, where the men of
war, on the capture of a city, were unsparingly put to death, but there
were no warriors in Ziklag at the time. The women and boys were
reserved for slaves, and the old people were spared out of respect to
age.
3. David and his men came to the city, and, behold, it was burned with
fire--The language implies that the smoke of the conflagration was
still visible, and the sacking very recent.
1Sa 30:6-15.
BUT
DAVID,
ENCOURAGED BY
GOD,
PURSUES
THEM.
6. David was greatly distressed--He had reason, not only on his own
personal account
(1Sa 30:5),
but on account of the vehement outcry and insurrectionary threats
against him for having left the place so defenseless that the families
of his men fell an unresisting prey to the enemy. Under the pressure of
so unexpected and widespread a calamity, of which he was upbraided as
the indirect occasion, the spirit of any other leader guided by
ordinary motives would have sunk;
but David encouraged himself in the LORD his God--His faith supplied
him with inward resources of comfort and energy, and through the
seasonable inquiries he made by Urim, he inspired confidence by
ordering an immediate pursuit of the plunderers.
9. came to the brook Besor--now Wady Gaza, a winter torrent, a little
to the south of Gaza. The bank of a stream naturally offered a
convenient rest to the soldiers, who, through fatigue, were unable to
continue the pursuit.
11-15. they found an Egyptian in the field, and brought him to
David--Old and homeborn slaves are usually treated with great kindness.
But a purchased or captured slave must look to himself; for, if feeble
or sick, his master will leave him to perish rather than encumber
himself with any additional burden. This Egyptian seems to have
recently fallen into the hands of an Amalekite, and his master having
belonged to the marauding party that had made the attack on Ziklag, he
could give useful information as to the course taken by them on their
return.
14. the Cherethites--that is, the Philistines
(Eze 25:16;
Zep 2:5).
15. Swear unto me by God--Whether there was still among these
idolatrous tribes a lingering belief in one God, or this Egyptian
wished to bind David by the God whom the Hebrews worshipped, the solemn
sanction of an oath was mutually recognized.
1Sa 30:16-31.
AND
RECOVERS
HIS
TWO
WIVES AND
ALL THE
SPOIL.
16. they were spread abroad upon all the earth--Believing that David
and all his men of war were far away, engaged with the Philistine
expedition, they deemed themselves perfectly secure and abandoned
themselves to all manner of barbaric revelry. The promise made in
answer to the devout inquiries of David
(1Sa 30:8)
was fulfilled. The marauders were surprised and panic-stricken. A
great slaughter ensued--the people as well as the booty taken from
Ziklag was recovered, besides a great amount of spoil which they had
collected in a wide, freebooting excursion.
21. David came to the two hundred men, which were so faint that they
could not follow--This unexpected accession of spoil was nearly proving
an occasion of quarrel through the selfish cupidity of some of his
followers, and serious consequences might have ensued had they not been
prevented by the prudence of the leader, who enacted it as a standing
ordinance--the equitable rule--that all the soldiers should share alike
(see
Nu 31:11;
see on
Nu 31:25).
26. when David came to Ziklag, he sent of the spoil to the elders of
Judah--This was intended as an acknowledgment to the leading men in
those towns and villages of Judah which had ministered to his
necessities in the course of his various wanderings. It was the dictate
of an amiable and grateful heart; and the effect of this well-timed
liberality was to bring a large accession of numbers to his camp
(1Ch 12:22).
The enumeration of these places shows what a numerous and influential
party of adherents to his cause he could count within his own tribe
[1Sa 30:27-31].
CHAPTER 31
1Sa 31:1-7.
SAUL
HAVING
LOST
HIS
ARMY AT
GILBOA, AND
HIS
SONS
BEING
SLAIN,
HE AND
HIS
ARMOR-BEARER
KILL
THEMSELVES.
1. Now the Philistines fought against Israel--In a regular engagement,
in which the two armies met
(1Sa 28:1-4),
the Israelites were forced to give way, being annoyed by the arrows of
the enemy, which, destroying them at a distance before they came to
close combat, threw them into panic and disorder. Taking advantage of
the heights of Mount Gilboa, [the Israelites] attempted to rally, but
in vain. Saul and his sons fought like heroes; but the onset of the
Philistines being at length mainly directed against the quarter where
they were, Jonathan and two brothers, Abinadab or Ishui
(1Sa 14:49)
and Melchishua, overpowered by numbers, were killed on the spot.
3-5. the battle went sore against Saul, &c.--He seems to have bravely
maintained his ground for some time longer; but exhausted with fatigue
and loss of blood, and dreading that if he fell alive into the enemy's
hands, they would insolently maltreat him
(Jos 8:29; 10:24;
Jud 8:21),
he requested his armor bearer to despatch him. However, that officer
refused to do so. Saul then falling on the point of his sword killed
himself; and the armor bearer, who, according to Jewish writers, was
Doeg, following the example of his master, put an end to his life also.
They died by one and the same sword--the very weapon with which they
had massacred the Lord's servants at Nob.
6. So Saul died--(see on
1Ch 10:13;
Ho 13:11).
and his three sons--The influence of a directing Providence is
evidently to be traced in permitting the death of Saul's three eldest
and most energetic sons, particularly that of Jonathan, for whom, had
he survived his father, a strong party would undoubtedly have risen and
thus obstructed the path of David to the throne.
and all his men, that same day together--his servants or bodyguard
(1Ch 10:6).
7. the men of Israel that were on the other side of the valley--probably the valley of Jezreel--the largest and southernmost of the
valleys that run between Little Hermon and the ridges of the Gilboa
range direct into the Jordan valley. It was very natural for the people
in the towns and villages there to take fright and flee, for had they
waited the arrival of the victors, they must, according to the war
usages of the time, have been deprived either of their liberty or their
lives.
1Sa 31:8-10.
THE
PHILISTINES
TRIUMPH OVER
THEIR
DEAD
BODIES.
8, 9. on the morrow, when the Philistines came to strip the slain, that
they found Saul and his three sons fallen--On discovering the corpses
of the slaughtered princes on the battlefield, the enemy reserved them
for special indignities. They consecrated the armor of the king and his
sons to the temple of Ashtaroth fastened their bodies on the temple of
Shen, while they fixed the royal heads ignominiously in the temple of
Dagon
(1Ch 10:10);
thus dividing the glory among their several deities.
10. to the wall--
(2Sa 21:12)
--"the street" of Beth-shan. The street was called from the temple
which stood in it. And they had to go along it to the wall of the city
(see
Jos 17:11).
1Sa 31:11-13.
THE
MEN OF
JABESH-GILEAD
RECOVER THE
BODIES AND
BURY
THEM AT
JABESH.
11-13. the inhabitants of Jabesh-gilead heard of that which the
Philistines had done--Mindful of the important and timely services
Saul had rendered them, they gratefully and heroically resolved not to
suffer such indignities to be inflicted on the remains of the royal
family.
12. valiant men arose, and went all night, and took the body of Saul
and the bodies of his sons--Considering that Beth-shan is an hour and a
half's distance, and by a narrow upland passage, to the west of the
Jordan (the whole being a journey from Jabesh-gilead of about ten
miles), they must have made all haste to travel thither to carry off
the headless bodies and return to their own side of the Jordan in the
course of a single night.
burnt them--This was not a Hebrew custom. It was probably resorted to
on this occasion to prevent all risk of the Beth-shanites coming to
disinter the royal remains for further insult.
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Robert Jamieson, A. R. Fausset and David Brown
Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible (1871)
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