1 Samuel
1 Samuel
1 Samuel
Lessons in I Samuel
by Paul G. Apple, February 2003
“they have rejected Me from being king over them” (Judges 8:7)
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Paul majored in English at Princeton University and graduated with a Master of Divinity
degree from Grace Theological Seminary in Winona Lake, IN in 1979. He lives in the
Baltimore area with his wife and four children and is currently the Marketing Manager
for the local Caterpillar distributor. His family is actively involved in local Christian
homeschooling and sports ministries along with local church responsibilities at Open
Door Bible Church.
BACKGROUND OF THE BOOK OF 1 SAMUEL
Jeffries:
The best introduction to the Book of 1 Samuel expresses in one declarative
sentence the full impact of the social, political, historical and theological dynamics which
characterized God’s Chosen People at the time of its writing:
b. When the narrative begins -- 1100 - 1050 B.C. -- Israel was in moral and
spiritual chaos. The terrible civil war against the tribe of Benjamin ( Judges 19 - 21 )
had broken the heart of the already-struggling nation, and years of undisciplined religion
-- the refusal to obey Jahweh -- had removed the people from the source of their spiritual
power. Having lost all governing authority and the ability to defend themselves, their
disobedience had finally removed their one abiding resource. The nation was in danger
of complete collapse.
Malick:
“YHWH'S DELIVERANCE OF HIS PEOPLE FROM THE OPPRESSION OF EVIL
WILL NOT BE REALIZED THROUGH THOSE LIKE ELI AND SAUL WHO TRUST
IN NATURAL STRENGTH BUT THROUGH THOSE LIKE HANNAH, SAMUEL,
JONATHAN, AND DAVID WHO IN THEIR WEAKNESS TRUST IN HIM.”
Davis:
“Triumph and tragedy are the two words which best describe the content of the books
of Samuel. Some of Israel’s greatest moments of glory and darkest hours of defeat are
retold with simplicity and candor. The stories retold in these books are of significant
value didactically for this present age. The faith and the failures of both great and small
are viewed in the light of sovereign grace. Historically the books are masterpieces of
national record.
The campaigns of Joshua conducted about 1400 B.C. enabled the children of Israel to
occupy the hill country and certain sections of the lowlands. However, with that
occupancy came the gradual infiltration of Canaanitic social and religious practices.
These had a tremendous negative effect on the progress of Israelite colonization. Due to
the subtle infiltration of Baalism, the spiritual life of Israel very quickly degenerated into
a state of apostasy. The rise of divinely appointed judges during this period provided
mainly for military needs. Under many of the judges there was a noticeable spiritual
decline, and in many cases, this was either initiated or permitted by the judges
themselves. In addition to the internal strife and spiritual weakness there was increasing
military pressure upon Israel from the outside. It was in this context that the prophet
Samuel made his appearance, and a most important one it was. He was a very capable
physician coming to the aid of Israel at a time when her fever was at the highest.”
Baxter: “In the case of 1 Samuel there is really no need to burden ourselves with a
detailed analysis. Fix it well in the mind – and the memory will easily retain it – that 1
Samuel is the book of the transition from the theocracy to the monarchy; and the book of
the three remarkable men – Samuel, the last of the Judges, Saul, the first of the Kings,
and David, the greatest of the kings.
If we remember this, we cannot easily forget the central spiritual message of the book.
God had called Israel into a unique relationship with Himself; and God Himself was
Israel’s King invisible. Through disobedience the people had brought chastisement upon
themselves from time to time, but were willing to attribute much of this, later, to the fact
that they had no human and visible king, such as the surrounding nations had; and now, at
length, as Samuel ages, and his sons prove perverse, the people make it the occasion to
press for a human king. The fateful choice is recorded in chapter viii. which should be
read carefully. It was a retrograde step, dictated merely by seeming expedience. It was
the way of human wisdom, not of faith in God. It was taking the lower level. It was a
refusing of God’s best, for the second best—and there is much difference between the
two.”
David Guzik :
“1 and 2 Samuel form one book in the ancient Hebrew manuscripts. They were not
divided into two books until the Old Testament was translated into Greek. We don’t
know who wrote the books; certainly, Samuel was a major contributor, but much of the
book takes place after his death in 1 Samuel 25. They are called the books of 1 and 2
Samuel, not because he wrote all of them, but because they describe his great ministry in
Israel and the legacy of it.”
http://calvarychapel.com/simivalley/commentaries/0901.htm
Savidge:
LEADERSHIP: FROM THE FRYING PAN INTO THE FIRE
OVERVIEW OF 1 SAMUEL
BIG IDEA:
PASSIONATE PRAYER CAN TRANSFORM A ROOT OF BITTERNESS INTO
A SEED OF BLESSING
INTRODUCTION:
What are your unfulfilled dreams? When have your expectations of blessing from the
Lord been frustrated or delayed?
B. (:6-7) Jealous Rivals Can Distract Us From Finding Contentment in the Lord
(Peninnah)
1. Insecurity Can Motivate Provocation from Jealous Rivals
“Her rival, however, would provoke her bitterly to irritate her”
2. Lack of Self-Consciousness
Oblivious to the presence of Eli the priest
“Now Eli the priest was sitting on the seat by the doorpost of the temple
of the Lord”
2. Transformation of Spirit
“Go in peace”
b. Countenance
“and her face was no longer sad”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Have you ever experienced what Bill Gothard describes as: Birth of a Vision / Death
of a Vision / Fulfillment of a Vision? What did you learn through this experience?
When have you been heartbroken over unfulfilled dreams? How did you respond?
2) If Hannah wanted a child so desperately, why was she willing to make such a vow
regarding giving up the child to the service of the Lord?
3) Should Eli have been more sensitive to the distressed spirit of Hannah? What type
of priest was Eli?
4) How well do we listen to God? Compare how the different people in this story
responded to God. How can we increase the passion and fervency of our prayers?
**********
Davis: “In great bitterness of soul (v. 10; cf. II Kings 4:27) she prayed to the Lord and
the essence of this prayer is wrapped up in two words found in verse 11, ‘remember
me.’ These words have a familiar ring to them. They represent the prayer of a soul in
desperate need. One is reminded of the simplicity of Samson’s prayer recorded in
Judges 16:28. In blindness and helplessness he cried out to his God and asked to be
‘remembered.’ This prayer was also found on the lips of a man being crucified at
Calvary. One of the malefactors who was hanged with Jesus looked to Him with faith
and said, ‘Lord, remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom’ (Luke 23:42). The
sincerity and the simplicity of this pleas were quickly recognized by the Lord, and He
replied, ‘To day shalt thou be with me in paradise (Luke 23:42).”
Falwell:
“Hannah was a mother who properly prepared for her children, and you can learn life-
changing lessons from her. This morning I am going to speak of five things that Hannah
did:
In a day when Planned Parenthood makes the wrong plans for the unborn, let’s look at
Hannah who makes the right plans for the unborn. Would to God that every future
mother in the world followed the example of Hannah. ”
James Dunn:
I. The Woman God Is Concerned About Is Hopeful When She Grieves.
A. God understands our grief.
B. God cares about our grief.
C. God can bring us through our grief.
D. God will make something beautiful out of our grief.
II. The Woman God Is Concerned About Is Hopeful When She Believes.
A. God is aware of us.
"You (God) keep close watch on everywhere I go." Job 13:27 (NCV)
III. The Woman God Is Concerned About Is Hopeful When She Perceives.
A. God will not ignore us.
B. God will not forget us.
C. God will not abandon us.
IV. The Woman God Is Concerned About Is Hopeful When She Receives.
A. God gives us grace.
B. God gives us comfort.
C. God gives us strength.
“The name for God which appears in Hannah’s vow -- ‘Lord of Hosts’ or ‘Lord
Sabaoth’ -- appears for the first time in Scripture here. It would have been literally
understood in the historical context of 1 Samuel as ‘Lord of Warrior Hosts,’ the name
of Jahweh in the manifestation of His mighty power. Although it shows up only a few
times in the Psalms, ‘Lord Sabaoth’ appears with great frequency in the writings of
some of the prophets who ministered during Israel’s period of exile.
"As ‘Lord of hosts’ God is able to marshall all these hosts to fulfill His purposes
and to help His people. No wonder the Psalmist derives such confidence from
this name. It is the distinctive name of Deity for Israel’s help and comfort in the
time of her division and failure."
- C.I. Schofield: Notes on 1 Samuel 1:11 in The Schofield Reference Bible
David Guzik :
i. Shiloh was the central city of Israel, the religious center, for almost four hundred
years. The tabernacle - the majestic tent God command Moses to build when they came
out of Egypt, was erected there, and in it sat the Ark of the Covenant. The Ark was the
symbolic throne of God among Israel, the sacred chest containing the stone tablets of
the Ten Commandments. At the Ark, once a year, the high priest would make
atonement for the sins of the nation. Though it was hidden, it was a powerful and
important part of Israel’s religious life.
ii. Today, if you visit Shiloh, you can see the bare, ancient outline of ruined walls of
stone, walls that had once surrounded Israel’s tabernacle for almost 400 years. On the
heights you can see desolate, fruitless hills all around; rocky and bare, except for a
distant Israeli neighborhood.
iii. Shiloh enjoyed all this glory for hundreds of years, but it came to an end abruptly.
Hundreds of years later, through the prophet Jeremiah, God used Shiloh as a lesson.
“Go to Shiloh,” He says. “Look what happened to a place of spiritual privilege and
glory when they forgot about Me. The same will happen to you if you do not turn again
to Me” (a paraphrase of Jeremiah 7:12-14).
http://calvarychapel.com/simivalley/commentaries/0901.htm
TEXT: 1 Samuel 1: 19-28
BIG IDEA:
OUR LEVEL OF SPIRITUAL CONSECRATION SHOULD MATCH OUR
DEPTH OF SPIRITUAL INDEBTEDNESS
A. Nursing of Samuel
B. Weaning of Samuel
Purposes: To present him before the Lord for a lifetime of dedicated service
A. Dedication of Samuel
“So I have also dedicated him to the Lord; as long as he lives he is dedicated to
the Lord.”
B. Worship of Samuel
“And he worshiped the Lord there.”
Picked up the baton from his faithful parents and continued on the same path of worship
and service.
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Are we surprised by how directly and quickly and specifically God answers our
prayers? Are we surprised and confused when God does not so answer our prayers?
Why this difference in response from a loving God?
2) Is the fabric of worship faithfully woven through our lives as it is in the family of
Elkanah and Hannah? What type of financial sacrifices and time commitment were
involved for them to maintain such obedience to the Lord’s commands? Do we
worship out of a sense of obligation or out of a heart overflowing with gratitude for all
that we have received in His grace?
3) How important are those first few years when a mother nurtures her newborn infant?
What are our expectations of the type of spiritual foundation that we can establish in
those years?
4) What surrounding circumstances would have made it especially difficult for Hannah
to keep her vow of leaving her only son with Eli to serve in the house of the Lord?
When are we tempted to renege on our commitments to the Lord?
**********
Blaikie : “Do not treat lightly, O parents, the connection between God and your
children! Cherish the thought that they are God’s gifts, God’s heritage to you,
committed by Him to you to bring up, but not apart from Him, not in separation from
those holy influences which He alone can impart, and which He is willing to impart.
What a cruel thing it is to cut this early connection between them and God, and send
them drifting through the world like a ship with a forsaken rudder, that flaps hither and
thither with every current of the sea! What a blessed thing when, above all things, the
grace and blessing of God are sought by parents for their children, when all the earnest
lessons of childhood are directed to this end, and before childhood has passed into
youth the grace of God rules the young heart, and the holy purpose is formed to live in
His fear through Jesus Christ, and to honour Him for evermore!”
MacArthur : “Two things stand out. First of all, she was dedicated to that child… She
kept her vow, I'll give that child to the Lord as soon as he's weaned, for a Hebrew
mother between two and three years of age, but she said I'm not going up there until this
child is recovered so that it can feed itself.
Do you know that's putting the child as a real priority. Some people might say she put
the child over worshiping the Lord. No, because she was taking care of the best gift
God ever gave her, she was rendering to God the highest service possible. It was more
important for that woman to stay there and nurse that child than to go offer sacrifices to
God. She knew the priorities. She stayed home with the child in total dedication and
commitment, training, loving, instructing and caring for that child. . .
First of all, she was dedicated to the child. That's the right home relatio nship. Mothers,
invest your life in those children. Believe me, it didn't stop there. Then she dedicated
the child to the Lord. She was not only dedicated to the child but dedicated the child to
the Lord, verse 24 . . .
It's a fabulous thing to think about. A woman gave her child to the Lord keeping a
promise and a vow she had made to God. But that doesn't mean she didn't care anymore
about the child, not on your life. She cared about that child the rest of that child's life,
she never really let go at all. In fact, as they would go back to the temple through the
years, they would always go back and express their care and their love to the child.”
Robert Deffinbaugh: “As Paul makes so clear in his epistles, God’s power is
demonstrated at the point of our weaknesses. That is grace. God’s grace does not seek
out our strong points and enhance them, so much as His grace seeks out our weakest
points so that it may be absolutely clear to all that it is God who accomplishes great
things through us. Those things which cause Hannah the greatest sorrow, the greatest
pain, are the very things God uses to produce her greatest joys. For those who trust in
Him, it will always be this way.”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 2:1-10
BIG IDEA:
ANSWERED PRAYER CAUSES THE RIGHTEOUS TO REJOICE IN THE
LORD – THE SOVEREIGN ONE WHO BOTH EXALTS THE LOWLY AND
JUDGES THE WICKED
INTRODUCTION (:1)
A. A Thankful Heart Overflows in Prayer of Praise
“Then Hannah prayed and said” – responding to Answered Prayer
Messianic implications
E. Summary
“Because I rejoice in Thy salvation”
1. His Holiness
“There is no one holy like the Lord”
2. His Uniqueness
“Indeed, there is no one besides Thee”
2. Accountability is Guaranteed
a. God Knows All
“For the Lord is a God of knowledge,”
b. God Judges Fairly
“And with Him actions are weighed.”
Blaikie : “His knowledge gives comfort … He sees all secret wickedness, and knows
how to deal with it. His eye is on every plot hatched in the darkness. He knows His
faithful servants, what they aim at, what they suffer, what a strain is often put on their
fidelity. And He never can forget them, and never can desert them, for ‘the angel of the
Lord encampeth about them that fear Him, and delivereth them.’”
C. (:5b) Example from the Realm of Family: Fruitful / Fertile vs. Barren
“Even the barren gives birth to seven,
But she who has many children languishes.”
Young: “the issues of life and death are in the hands of God.”
Chestnut: “The way that God delivered Hannah is characteristic of the way God
rules His world.”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Contrast this prayer with the tone of Hannah’s entreaties in chapter 1. How do you
account for such a difference? What types of mood swings do we experience in our
sessions of pleading and praising our Lord?
3) How does this almost warrior- like tone harmonize with the characteristic traits of a
godly woman of meekness and sweetness and charitableness?
4) How have you seen in your own experience God reverse natural human
circumstances or bring good out of evil or raise up those who have fallen or bring down
the proud and the arrogant?
**********
Fritz: “Hannah praised God because he makes the strong weak and makes the weak
strong. He replenishes those who are lacking and strips away wealth from the greedy.
He breaks down barriers from those who think they have impregnable castles and He
gives freedom to the prisoners. He speaks a word and the bows of mighty men are
broken, they are disarmed and run in fear of a shadow.
God lifts up the feeble and give friends to the lonely and companionship to those who
are without a sense of family. He feeds the hungry and takes away the appetite of those
who are hoarding what they have. He gives strength to the weary and humbles the
proud. He works wonders to those who believe His promises and He disappoints those
who brag of their great abilities.”
Young: “It is the holiness of the Lord that makes him other than man, transcendent.
This transcendence is in terms of degree rather than of remoteness.”
Keil: “The exaltation of the horn of the anointed of Jehovah commenced with the
victorious and splendid expansion of the power of David, was repeated with every
victory over the enemies of God and His kingdom gained by the successive kings of
David’s house, goes on in the advancing spread of the kingdom of Christ, and will
eventually attain to its eternal consummation in the judgment of the last day, through
which all the enemies of Christ will be made His footstool.”
Blaikie : “When we exa mine the substance of the song more carefully, we find that
Hannah derives her joy from four things about God: --
1. His nature (vv. 2-3)
2. His providential government (vv. 4-8)
3. His most gracious treatment of His saints (v. 9)
4. The glorious destiny of the kingdom of His anointed (v. 10)
Blaikie : “The class of qualities that are here marked as offensive to God are pride, self-
seeking, self- sufficiency both in ordinary matters and in their spiritual development.
Your tyrannical and haughty Pharaohs, your high-vaunting Sennacheribs, your pride-
intoxicated Nebuchadnezzars, are objects of special dislike to God. So is your proud
Pharisee, who goes up to the temple thanking God that he is not as other men, no, nor
like that poor publican, who is smiting on his breast, as well such a sinner may. It is the
lowly in heart that God takes pleasure in.”
Chestnut: “Hannah's deliverance caused her to look beyond herself to how God was
working in the world at large. It prompted her to look to God's final victory! (Closing
thought: Luke 12:32).”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 2: 11-26
BIG IDEA:
SPIRITUAL MINISTRY CAN BE MARKED BY EITHER SELFISH
EXPLOITATION OR DEDICATED SERVICE
(CONTRAST BETWEEN THE 2 EXTREMES OF THE SONS OF ELI
AND SAMUEL)
INTRODUCTION: (:11-12)
A. (:11) Introduction to Samuel – Finality of His Consecration to Spiritual Ministry
1. Separation from His Family
“Now Elkanah went to his home at Ramah”
2. (:23-25) Shame of Despising the Counsel of Their Father = the High Priest
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Do we selfishly hold on to our children and try to direct their future in a way that
offers us the most satisfaction or do we truly dedicate our children to the Lord and seek
His direction for their lives and ministry?
2) What types of exploitative spiritual ministry have you witnessed? Why do God’s
people put up with such abuses? Study the failure of Eli as a father to properly
discipline his sons.
3) How has the Lord rewarded you for whatever sacrifices and service you have
offered up to Him so that your blessing far exceeds your offering?
4) Review the verses in Proverbs that speak of the value of a good name and a good
reputation. What type of reputation have you earned by virtue of your style of ministry
to the Lord?
**********
QUOTES FOR REFLECTION:
Blaikie : “First our attention is turned to the gross wickedness and scandalous behaviour
of Eli’s sons. There are many dark pictures in the history of Israel in the time of the
Judges, -- pictures of idolatry, pictures of lust, pictures of treachery, pictures of
bloodshed -- but there is none more awful than the picture of the high priest’s family at
Shiloh. In the other cases members of the nation had become grossly wicked; but in
this case it is the salt that has lost its savour – it is those who should have led the people
in the ways of God that have become the ringleaders of the devil’s army. . . They are
marked by the two prevailing vices of the lowest natures – greed and lechery. Their
greed preys upon the worthy men who brought their offerings to God’s sanctuary in
obedience to His la w; their lechery seduces the very women who, employed in the
service of the place (see Revised Version), might have reasonably thought of it as the
gate to heaven rather than the avenue of hell. So shameless were they in both kinds of
vice that they were at no pains to conceal either the one or the other. It mattered
nothing what regulations God had made as to the parts of the offering the priest was to
have; down went their fork into the sacrificial caldron, and whatever it drew up became
theirs. It mattered not that the fat of certain sacrifices was due to God, and that it ought
to have been given off before any other use was made of the flesh; the priests claimed
the flesh in its integrity, and if the offerer would not willingly surrender it their servant
fell upon him and wrenched it away. It is difficult to say whether the greater hurt was
inflicted by such conduct on the cause of religion or on the cause of ordinary morality.
As for the cause of religion, it suffered that terrible blow which it always suffers
whenever it is dissociated from morality. The very heart and soul is torn out of religion
when men are led to believe that their duty consists in merely believing certain dogmas,
attending to outward observances, paying dues, and ‘performing’ worship. What kind
of conception of God can men have who are encouraged to believe that justice, mercy,
and truth have nothing to do with His service? How can they ever think of Him as a
Spirit, who requires of them that worship Him that they worship Him in spirit and in
truth? How can such religion give men a real veneration for God, or inspire them with
that spirit of obedience, trust, and delight of which he ought ever to be the object?..
Under such religion all belief in God’s existence tends to vanish. Though His existence
may continue to be acknowledged, it is not a power, it has no influence; it neither
stimulates to good nor restrains from evil. Religion becomes a miserable form, without
life, without vigour, without beauty – a mere carcass deserving only to be buried out of
sight.”
Yap: “Eli’s sin was not having bad children, but raising them inactively, parenting them
invisibly, and excusing them meekly. He did not dismiss or ban their service, denounce
or report them publicly, or remove and banish them from the temple precincts. He did
not even limit who they meet, where they go, or what they do. In the end, when all was
said, nothing was done. Too little, too late. Eli’s words were weak, hollow, and
ineffectual.
Eli’s sons did not listen to their father’s voice. Eli’s problem was not because he could
not discipline them since he was old, but because he did not discipline them when he
was young. The intention of verse 26 was to contrast how Samuel served God and
behaved gentlemanly the moment he knew how to walk, talk, or do anything. Eli’s son,
on the other hand, did not listen to the heartbroken father. Their father’s sadness did not
leave them shaken, thinking, or heavyhearted.”
Deffinbaugh: “The doorway of the tent of meeting is the place where God meets with
the Levitical priests, the place where God reveals His glory. There Aaron and his sons
are consecrated, set apart, for their priestly service. And now, not that many years later,
this becomes a very different kind of meeting place, a place where Eli’s sons
rendezvous with the women with whom they commit sexual immorality. . .
How desperately sinful the priesthood has become. Godly saints like Elkanah and
Hannah must grit their teeth as they seek to worship God at Shiloh. Things seem to go
from bad to worse. Eli is old and nearing death. His two sons are next in line. The
righteous surely shudder at the thought. And yet, in this dark day for Israel, a little boy
is growing up. Eli’s sons are doomed in God’s sight; He has purposed to put them to
death (verse 25). They are not highly esteemed by the godly. Then there is Samuel. This
young lad finds favor with both God and man -- if men only knew what the future of
this lad held for them and their nation. In some of the darkest of days of Israel’s history,
when everything seems to be falling apart, God raises up the one whom He purposes to
use to serve Him faithfully and to serve men as well. Such a one is Samuel. Eli’s sons
are on their way out; Samuel is on his way up.
This verse sounds strangely familiar, doesn’t it? We know that Luke uses very similar
words in reference to Jesus of Nazareth, as He is growing up:
‘And Jesus kept increasing in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men’
(Luke 2:52).
Why such similar words? Why does Luke choose to employ the same description as the
author of 1 Samuel to speak of Samuel’s development as a child? The days in which our
Lord was born were also very dark days in Israel’s history. The religious system had
departed from the Word of God, just as in Samuel’s day. And yet, while things looked
very bleak for Israel, a young Lad was growing up, virtually unknown and unnoticed by
the nation. This Child was the Messiah. He would save His people from their sins. He
would someday sit on the throne of His father, David. And He, like Samuel His
prototype, would exercise priesthood in a way that would deliver the people of God
from their sins.”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 2: 27-36
BIG IDEA:
THE ABUSE OF THE PRIVILEGES OF SPIRITUAL LEADERSHIP HAS FAR-
REACHING CONSEQUENCES
INTRODUCTION:
Prophecy delivered to Eli by “a man of God” --
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) What spiritual privileges have you received that increase your accountability before
the Lord in terms of the stewardship of your spiritual gifts and the quality of your
ministry?
2) Does verse 30 indicate that the Lord changes His mind after He has anno unced His
intention to bless some group of people? How do we determine which blessings are
conditional vs unconditional or which group of people will enjoy the benefits of the
promised blessing?
3) What is the relationship between the “faithful priest ” and “My anointed” as
described in verse 35? Try to identify these people as well as the significance of the
timeframe mentioned (“always”).
4) How do selfish ministers in today’s context “make themselves fat with the choicest
of every offering”?
**********
Blaikie : “One word, in conclusion, respecting that great principle of the kingdom of
God announced by the prophet as that on which Jehovah would act in reference to his
priests – ‘Them that honour Me I will honour, but they that despise Me shall be lightly
esteemed.’ It is the eternal rule of the kingdom of God, not limited to the days of
Hophni and Phinehas, but, like the laws of the Medes and Persians, eternal as the
ordinances of heaven. It is a law confirmed by all history; every man’s life confirms it,
for though this life is but the beginning of our career, and the final clearing up of Divine
providence is to be left to the judgment-day, yet when we look back on the world’s
history we find that those that have honoured God, God has honoured them, while they
that have despised Him have indeed been lightly esteemed. However men may try to
get their destiny into their own hands; however they may secure themselves from this
trouble and from that; however, like the first Napoleon, they may seem to become
omnipotent, and to wield an irresistible power, yet the day of retribution comes at last;
having sown to the flesh, of the flesh also they reap corruption. While the men that
have honoured God, the men that have made their own interests of no account, but have
set themselves resolutely to obey God’s will and do God’s work; the men that have
believed in God as the holy Ruler and Judge of the world, and have laboured in private
life and in public service to carry out the great rules of His kingdom, -- justice, mercy,
the love of God and the love of man, -- these are the men that God has honoured; these
are the men whose work abides; these are the men whose names shine with undying
honour, and from whose example and achievements young hearts in every following
age draw their inspiration and encouragement.”
Sahuarita: “Who is the faithful priest predicted here? He was a great priest, because he
did according to what is in God’s heart and in God’s mind. He was a blessed priest,
because God said.
(1) This promise was partially fulfilled in Samuel, because he functioned as a godly
priest, effectively replacing the ungodly sons of Eli.
(2) The promise was partially fulfilled in Zadok, in the days of Solomon, because he
replaced Eli’s family line in the priesthood.
(3) The promise was ultimately fulfilled in Jesus Christ, because He is a priest forever
according to the order of Melchezedek (Hebrews 7:12-17). . .
There are four "S"s that are used by Satan to destroy men and women of God.
Here is the list of the tips for self-destruction:
- Self – God hates our pride.
- Silver --Some ministers have wealth of thought, but some ministers like these
two guys only have thoughts of wealth.
- Sex
- Sloth”
http://www.ccos.org/09-1Sam-02-02-jk-note.html
After the death of Aaron the high priestly office was filled by Eleazar, but later was
transferred, for a reason not revealed, to the house of Ithamar. Eli was a descendant of
Ithamar. I Chronicles 24:4 records that there were 16 sons of Eleazar and 8 sons of
Ithamar. The line of Eleazar continued through Zadok, the faithful priest, unbroken till
the birth of Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ, according to prophecy, was not a priest after the
order of Aaron, but rather a priest after the order of Melchizedek, testifying of Christ's
eternal priesthood. God preserved only one line faithful through the generations. . . .
The weakness of the human priesthood pointed to the faithful Priest who would be the
eternal God of heaven and earth. Jesus Christ did all that was in the mind of God. He
obeyed perfectly. There was nothing within His heart that desired to walk contrary to
God's commands. Jesus Christ offered the perfect, unblemished sacrifice that covered
Eli's sins and that covers your and my sins of disobedience. The ‘sure house’ is the
church for which Jesus Christ laid down His life! Christ made that house secure by His
own blood and poured out His Spirit on His people to preserve them in the path of
obedience. By His grace we will honor God above our children. We pray for that
strength as we seek to raise our children in God's fear.”
http://www.prca.org/current/Articles/1%20Sam%202%2027-36.htm
TEXT: 1 Samuel 3:1-21
BIG IDEA:
THE FAITHFUL SPOKESMAN FOR GOD COMMUNICATES EVEN THE
HARD WORDS OF JUDGMENT
(WHAT IT MEANS TO DECLARE THE WHOLE COUNSEL OF GOD)
C. (:2-6) The Persistence of the Lord’s Calling – Despite our Failure to Comprehend
Twice both Eli and Samuel missed the message
But the key = Samuel’s Responsiveness:
- Quick to respond -- “then he ran to Eli”
- Available to obey -- “Here I am”
(Wouldn’t it be great if our kids always responded in this fashion)
Blaikie : “Hitherto Samuel had not known the Lord – that is, he had not been cognizant
of His way of communicating with men in a supernatural form – and it had never
occurred to him that such a thing could happen in his case.”
E. (:8-9) The Guidance From Spiritual Mentors in Discerning the Lord’s Calling
“Then Eli discerned that the Lord was calling the boy”
B. Faithfulness to the Message and Obedience to the Mission are the Keys
“So Samuel told him everything and hid nothing from him”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
2) Do we have any sense of the Lord’s various callings to us in our life – ways He has
gifted us, special missions He has intended for us, etc.?
3) What lessons can we learn from this passage about the necessity of a father taking
the initiative to follow thru with consistent discipline for his children?
4) Compare other passages that speak of the Lord being with someone in terms of
showing them grace and favor. When have we experienced that special type of blessing
that caused us to prosper in every way like the godly man of Psalm 1?
**********
Six years ago the "Los Angeles Times" told the story of
Bob Haifley.
Spending 2,500 work hours over five years, Bob glued
65,000 toothp icks to build a life-sized Jesus.
It hangs from a wire in his garage against a black
backdrop, illuminated by a spotlight.
What made Haifley, a humble water-department supervisor
and nonartist, star collecting toothpicks and inviting
the ridicule of his neighbors by building California's
answer to Noah's Ark?
"God told me to do it," he says.
According to Haifley, God not only commissioned the work
one day while he was driving his pickup, but showed
him how to do the spiky hair after years of indecision.
Did God REALLY tell him all this?
B. Direct vision/voice/dreams.
1) Young Samuel in tabernacle and God's voice. 1 Sam 3:1f
a) Audible voice.
b) Obedient response.
2) Paul on road to Damascus.
a) Others heard sound, saw light, but no more.
b) Given messages on several different occasions.
B. Continuationist approach.
1) Joel's Pentecost prophecy only partially fulfilled. Acts 2:17
a) Church age is period of universal Spirit.
b) "Two Witnesses" of Tribulation. Rev 11:3
2) Visions were common in typical NT churches. 1 Cor 14
a) Apostles and others received visions often.
b) Spirit-tradition continued after NT finished.
3) No hint in NT of cessation of Spirit.
a) 1 Cor 13:8 speaks of glorification, not canon.
b) Removal of Spirit at Rapture? People still saved.
B. Cultural dimension.
1) New Age emphasis on channeling, etc.
2) Catholics and visions of Mary, Pentecostals and 800 ft.
Jesus.
I believe that each one of us is being called into a ministry and needs to listen to the
Lord speaking to us. We may not hear an audible voice but God is also speaking clearly
to us through the Scriptures. Hearing God speak to us through the Scriptures means
more than just reading the Scriptures. We need to hear by the Spirit as we read the
Bible. It is the Spirit that brings the written words alive to us. The Pharisees had the Old
Testament and lo ved it but did not see Jesus in its pages. They had the Scriptures but
did not have the Spirit to reveal it to them. The Scriptures can only come alive to us
when we first have a relationship with Christ and desire that He speak to us through
them. When God speaks to us we need to press on and ask Him to say more. Sometimes
He tells us a little bit and then waits for us to seek Him to get more, to say ‘speak Lord
your servant is listening’. God called Samuel by name and then waited for Samuel to
respond. We still go through the same process today. God is calling out to you by name
but are you listening. It has been said that too often our relationship to the Lord is
expressed in the words "Listen, Lord! Your servant is speaking!" instead of the words
"Speak, Lord! Your servant is listening!"
David Washburn: “An amazing story, which still holds important truths for us today,
the first of which deals with God’s call. God’s call, God’s voice, God’s direction. It
doesn’t always come when we’re expecting it, and sometimes, God’s call is not always
what we want to do. Samuel certainly wasn’t expecting this call from God, it didn’t
really come at a convenient time, and he certainly didn’t relish telling Eli what was
going to happen to his family. This message from God came during a time of national
uncertainty and a time of spiritual waywardness, but many times the most exciting
possibilities are presented to us during turbulent times. Too often, we allow the
turbulence to overwhelm us and it interferes with our ability to hear God and seek His
direction. The key is in our ability to tune in, listen, and obey as Samuel did.”
Blaikie : “Samuel’s entire devotion to God’s service, so beautiful in one of such tender
years, is the sign of a character well adapted to become the medium of God’s habitual
communications with His people. Young though he is, his very youth in one sense will
prove an advantage. It will show that what he speaks is not the mere fruit of his own
thinking, but is the message of God. It will show that the spiritual power that goes forth
with his words is not his own native force, but the force of the Holy Spirit dwelling in
him. It will thus be made apparent to all that God has not forsaken His people, corrupt
and lamentably wicked though the young priests are. . .
And by-and-by other oracles came to him, by which all men might have known that he
was the recognized channel of communication between God and the people. We shall
see in our next chapter into what trouble the nation was brought by disregarding his
prophetic office, and recklessly determining to drag the ark of God into the battlefield.
Meanwhile we cannot but remark what a dangerous position, in a mere human point of
view, Samuel now occupied. The danger was that which a young man encounters when
suddenly or early raised to the possession of high spiritual power. Samuel, though little
more than a boy, was now virtually the chief man in Israel. Set so high, his natural
danger was great. But God, who placed him there, sustained in him the sp9irit of
humble dependence After all he was but God’s servant.. Humble obedience was still
his duty.”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 4:1-22
BIG IDEA:
WHEN SUPERSTITION AND SELF-WILL REPLACE GENUINE WORSHIP
AND OBEDIENT FAITH THE GLORY OF THE LORD DEPARTS FROM HIS
PEOPLE
Must ask the question: Why were the Israelites choosing to go out to battle without first
inquiring of the Lord and making sure their spiritual condition was in the proper state of
preparation?
Significance of the Glory of the Lord – symbolized by the Ark of the Covenant
- His Presence
- His Power
- His Favor
Exod. 25:10-22
Blaikie : “The Philistines were too wise a people to yield to panic. If the Hebrew God,
that did such wonders in the wilderness, was present with their opponents, there was all
the more need for their bestirring themselves and quitting them like men. The elders of
Israel had not reckoned on this wise plan. It teaches us, even from a heathen point of
view, never to yield to panic. Even when everything looks desperate, there may be
some untried resource to fall back on.”
C. (:10-11) Disastrous Defeat Bursts the Bubble of Superstition and Self Will and
Exposes the Harsh Reality of Spiritual Power Failure
1. Bottom Line Summary
“So the Philistines fought and Israel was defeated”
3. Crowning Blow
“And the ark of God was taken”
4. Fitting Justice
“and the two sons of Eli, Hophni and Phinehas, died”
2. Family Tragedy: “your two sons also, Hophni and Phinehas, are dead”
“And she called the boy Ichabod, saying, ‘The glory has departed from Israel,’ because
the ark of God was taken and because of her father-in-law and her husband.”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Where is Samuel when all these events are taking place? Why aren’t the people
seeking the word of the Lord from him? Are we taking direction and leadership from
the right people?
3) Trace the history of the ark of the covenant in earlier OT references. (Numbers
10:33-35; Joshua 6:6-21) What types of prior successes bore some connection to the
presence of the ark of the covenant? After a spiritual victory in some area do we
approach the next similar incident with a measure of our confidence rooted in our past
success as opposed to directly being dependent upon God?
4) Why is emotion alone not a good indicator of the Lord’s leading in a given
situation?
**********
QUOTES FOR REFLECTION:
Unfortunately, many ‘civilized’ Christians today have similarly added to their faith.
True, we may not worship graven images or cast magic spells, but we sometimes treat
our relationship with God in Christ as some sort of a ‘charm,’ do we not? Have you
ever had a sense that, if you missed too many Sunday services in a row, something
‘bad’ might happen to you? Do you worry that, if Christ suddenly returned and found
you reading the ‘wrong’ kind of novel or watching the ‘wrong’ kind of TV show, He’ll
be so upset that He might call the whole eternal life thing off? The professional
baseball players who automatically ‘cross’ themselves before every at-bat and the
pilgrims who travel to various places in order to climb stairs on their knees and the
Christians who are quietly afraid that God’s grace won’t be sufficient to protect them
from the wiles of the Devil all have at least one thing in common: they’ve added non-
Biblical traditions to their faith in Christ. And, in some cases, these traditions have
taken precedence in their thinking and have, therefore, diminished their faith. This
doesn’t leave them ‘less saved,’ but it certainly hampers their relationship with the
Lord. They have forgotten that truth that nothing can be added to the complete work of
salvation done by Jesus Christ on the cross at Calvary. They have been robbed of the
joy that comes from the ‘by- faith’ Christian life and, in the process -- without ever
meaning to -- they have ‘trivialized’ God.”
Raymond Perkins : “Paul Harvey tells a story about an attractive airline stewardess who
was being hounded by two flirts – one at the front of the plane, the other at the back.
She was obviously very put-off by the very forward advances being made by the two
men, but she kept right on doing her job. Near the end of the flight one of the men
became particularly bold and as the plane was about to land he handed her a key to his
apartment and the address and said, ‘See you tonight.’ So she took them, then she
walked to the back of the plane, handed them to the other flirt, winked and said, ‘Don’t
be late.’ Later on that evening I bet there were two very disappointed men in some
apartment somewhere. Have you ever been disappointed when someone you were
looking for didn’t show up? Maybe it was the way they were invited. That’s one reason
God doesn’t show up. Sometimes God doesn’t come because He doesn’t appreciate the
way He is invited. Revival isn’t going to happen as long as we want to God to come so
that we can use Him rather than serve Him. That is the underlying principle of our
lesson today as we study the revival under the prophet Samuel…
The Israelites were living however they thought best – idols, etc. Yet they thought that
so long as they had the Ark of the Covenant they had God. They kept Him in a box.
1. So when they ran into trouble they went and got the box. Prior in their history when
the Ark went with them they won –God was with them. Joshua 3 – when they crossed
the Jordan, Joshua 6 – when they marched around Jericho, and throughout the rest of
the Conquest when the Ark went with them they were victorious.
2. So they were not accustomed to this, to defeat. Yet because of their disregard for God
and His ways and their selfish reasons for asking for God’s help God did not show up.
He did not accept their invitation. Israel did not understand that they had lost God’s
presence long before they lost the Ark. The glory of the Lord leaves when people try to
box God up for their own selfish agendas….
I believe the journey from Ichabod to Ebenezer, from the absence of God’s presence to
the Help of His hand, can happen today. But the only way it will happen is when we
stop playing church and make our lives a temple for God to dwell in. ”
John Hamby: “Notice with me that the text reveals three wrong ways in which people
try to interact with God.
The ark was about 4 ft long by 2 ft high and 2 ft. wide. The ark was made of wood and
overlaid with pure gold. On the top of the ark was a solid slab of gold called the mercy
seat and in the ark was the tables of God’s law. Out of the mercy seat were the
Cherubim with their wings outstretched. The ark was the most sacred piece of furniture
in the temple and it was kept in the holy of holies. It was so holy that it was kept behind
a veil and only the high priest was allowed to look upon it once each year when he
offered the sacrifice for the atonement for Israel’s sins (Lev. 16).
Now they sent for the ark and wanted it present with them. It was not that they wanted
the ark that they may serve God or worship God or reverence God – they wanted the
presence of God for their own purposes. They were not seeking the will of God, they
were not walking by faith and they certainly were not seeking to glorify God. Even
worse, the two wicked sons of Eli, Hophni and Phinehas would be carrying the ark of
God.
It was significant for Israel to learn that they could not manipulate God by means of His
Ark to given them victory when their heart were not right with Him. A modern form of
this is to see the promises of God as some kind of magical formula, ‘If I do this, this
and this, then God must do this…’ Christians need to learn that God is not like a mop or
a dish rag that we call upon just to clean up our messes. He would not allow Israel to
use Him, and he won’t let us either! The question remains, ‘Are we putting God first in
our lives or summoning God when all else has failed us?’
James Davis : “We are in a battle today. We need to disabuse ourselves of the idea that
God will bless us in- spite of our disobedience. If we bring God into the picture while
we are disobeying Him, He will engineer our failure. God gets more glory in the defeat
of His carnal people, than He does in their victories. God is interested in not covering
sin, but exposing sin. . .
In this revival we must make sure that we do not try to manipulate the power of God.
God will use us; we will not use Him. He must be first in all our battle plans. We must
not presume upon the power of God. If there is to be spiritual victory in America, God
will have to give it to us. . .
God can not be captured. We can not use somebody else’s God or someone else’s
spirituality. We can not use someone’s prayer life to obtain victory. We can not use
someone else’s Bible knowledge of God. We can not use someone else’s anointing of
the Holy Spirit. We can not capture someone else’s power with God. We can not have
someone else’s revival. We must make up our mind to have our own personal and
corporate revival from God.”
Blaikie : “The history is silent about the Philistines from the days of Samson. The last
we have heard of them was the fearful tragedy at the death of that great Judge of Israel,
when the house fell upon the lords and the people, and such a prodigious slaughter of
their great men took place. From that calamity they seem now to have revived. They
would naturally be desirous to revenge that unexampled catastrophe, and as Ebenezer
and Aphek are situated in the land of Israel, it would seem that the philistines were the
aggressors. . .
Since the ark was carried off Eli must have had a miserable time of it, reproaching
himself for his weakness if he gave even a reluctant assent to the plan, and feeling that
uncertainty of conscience which keeps one even from prayer, because it makes one
doubtful if God will listen. Poor old man of ninety-eight years, he could be tremble for
the ark! . . .
BIG IDEA:
GOD PROTECTS HIS HOLINESS BY CURSING THOSE WHO FAIL TO
APPROACH HIM WITH THE PROPER FEAR AND CAREFULNESS
REVIEW:
Remember what the ark of God symbolizes:
His Presence
His Power
His Favor – but only when approached with fear and carefulness
3. (:6-7) The Philistines Paid a Heavy Price for Profaning the Sacred
Philistines were not very bright … but they were starting to wake up and get the
message. No waiting for council decision this time; just send it away and let the
problem rest on the next city. No attempt at a solution
Blaikie : “The idea of presenting offerings to the gods corresponding with the object in
connection with which they were presented was often given effect to by heathen
nations.”
Appleby: “Presumably the mice are seen as the cause of the plague they’ve been
experienc ing. There may have been a plague of mice that accompanied the outbreak of
tumors. In fact it could have been that this plague was something like bubonic plague
that we now know is carried by rodents and that shows itself in tumours or boils.”
Cf. how the language and ideas hearken back to the plagues inflicted
against the Egyptians and to God’s hardening of the heart of the
unrepentant Pharoah.
Appleby: “They want to check whether in fact it is God who’s behind this disaster.
They figure that if it isn’t God who’s done this, then, being milk cows, they’ll simply
turn around and go looking for their calves. But if God is behind it then he’ll lead them
back to Israel. Well, the cows head straight up the road to Israel leaving their hungry
calves behind. The ark is on its way home.”
III. (6:13 – 7:2) THE ISRAELITES LEARN NOT TO MESS WITH THE ARK
OF THE HOLY GOD
5. (:18b) Memorial
“The large stone on which they set the ark of the Lord is a witness to this
day in the field of Joshua the Beth-shemite.”
Hamby: “But once the ark arrived in Beth-Shemesh it should have been covered, it was
not suppose to be seen by anyone except the high priest. The people did not do this even
though they knew and for the cost for this error of judgment will be high.”
Young: “In Josh 15:60 it is called Kirjath-baal, indicating possibly the presence of a
sanctuary there. Earlier it was a city in the Gibeonite league.”
b. Re-establishment of Priestly Ro le
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) How can God’s domination over the idol Dagon give us a sense of confidence and
realized victory as we face the foes of wickedness and idolatry? Contrast the shame
and humiliation experienced by the priests of Dagon with the rejoicing that should
characterize the priests of the living God.
3) How do we go about rekindling our fear of God and respect for His holiness?
Where have we crossed the line and introduced presumption and carelessness into how
we approach God?
4) What types of preparation for reformation do you think Samuel was making during
this difficult time period – both in his own personal life and in his public ministry?
**********
QUOTES FOR REFLECTION:
Davis: “It is doubtful that the number ’50,000’ belongs in the text. In the first place, the
syntax is irregular in that there is an absence of the conjunction and the small number
comes first. Second, three reputable manuscripts omit that number. Third, it is highly
improbable that 50,000 people lived in that small community. Fourth, Josephus states
that 70 died and does not mention the 50,000 (Antiquities 6:1.4).”
Blaikie : “At last the ark leaves the land of the Philistines… It is a solemn truth that
there are aspects of the Savior’s character, in which He is only a terror and a trouble…
Yet it is the aspect in which God usually appears to the sinner. It is the aspect in which
our consciences present Him when we are conscious of having incurred His displeasure.
And while man remains a sinner and in love with his sin, he may try to disguise the
solemn fact to his own mind, but it is nevertheless true that the secret desire is to get rid
of God. As the apostle puts it, he does not like to retain God in his knowledge (Rom. I.
28). He says to God, ‘Depart from us, for we desire not the knowledge of Thy ways’
(Job axe. 14). Nay, he goes a step further – ‘The fool hath said in his heart, There is no
God’ (Ps. xiv. I). Where he still makes some acknowledgment of Him, he may try to
propitiate Him by offerings, and to make up for the transgressions he commits in some
things by act of will- worship, or voluntary humiliation in other things. But alas! Of
how large a portion even of men in Christian lands is it true that they do not love God.
Their hearts have no yearning for Him. The thought of Him is a disturbing,
uncomfortable element. Heart communion with Him is a difficulty not to be overcome.
Forms of worship that leave the heart unexercised are a great relief. Worship
performed by choirs and instruments and aesthetic rules comes welcome as a substitute
for the intercourse and homage of the soul.”
Appleby: “The people of Beth-shemesh have made the appropriate response of worship.
Yet there are some in Israel who either don’t understand the significance of this day, or
simply don’t have any respect for the Lord. The text isn’t quite clear what happens
exactly. Some suggest that these 70 men looked inside the ark. Others simply refer to
them as not rejoicing when the ark returned. Perhaps they were afraid they might suffer
the same illnesses as the Philistines. Perhaps they simply didn’t care that the Lord was
back in their midst. But whatever their sin, their lack of respect for the Lord, their lack
of piety, was serious enough that 70 of them died. Again we discover just how
dangerous it is to mess with the living God. He has to be taken seriously. You can’t just
ignore him and you certainly can’t afford to oppose him.”
Keil: “The longer the Philistines resisted and refused to recognize the chastening hand
of the living God in the plagues inflicted upon the, the more severely would they be
punished, that they might be brought at last to see that the God of Israel, whose
sanctuary they still wanted to keep as a trophy of their victory ove r that nation, was the
omnipotent God, who was able to destroy His foes.”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 7:3-17
BIG IDEA:
STRONG SPIRITUAL LEADERSHIP (SAMUEL) USES THE GIFT OF
EXHORTATION AND THE WEAPON OF PRAYER TO ACCOMPLISH THE
MINISTRY GOALS OF SPIRITUAL REVIVAL, DELIVERANCE FROM
ENEMIES, PEACEFUL EXISTENCE, AND RIGHTEOUS JUDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION:
A strong spiritual leader needs to know how to motivate people and how to
intercede on their behalf to the Lord of hosts. That is the secret to accomplishing
ministry objectives.
Davis: Samuel was well-known for his emphasis upon prayer (8:6; 12:19, 23)
b. Fasting
“and fasted on that day”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) How are we using our spiritual gifts to encourage and motivate other believers?
2) What principles can we glean from this passage to guide us in praying for revival in
our own country?
3) Contrast the great power of the hand of the Lord compared to the limited and
constrained power of the hand of the Philistines. Do we have confidence in the power
of God working on our behalf to subdue our enemies?
4) What have been some of the famous circuit rider preachers down through church
history who can look back to the pattern of the faithful service of Samuel throughout
the land of Israel?
**********
Blaikie : “It must have been with feelings very different from those of their last
encounter, when the ark of God was carried into the battle, that the host of Israel now
faced the Philistine army near Mizpeh. Then they had only the symbol of God’s
gracious presence, now they had the reality. Then their spiritual guides were the
wicked Hophni and Phinehas; now their guide was ho ly Samuel. Then they had rushed
into the fight in thoughtless unconcern about their sins; now they had confessed them,
and through the blood of sprinkling they had obtained a sense of forgiveness. Then
they were puffed up by a vain presumption; now they were animated by a calm but
confident hope. Then their advance was hallowed by no prayer; now the cry of needy
children had gone up from God’s faithful servant. In fact, the battle with the Philistines
had already been fought by Samuel on his knees. There can be no more sure token of
success than this. Are we engaged in conflict with our own besetting sins? Or are we
contending against scandalous transgression in the world around us? Let us first fight
the battle on our knees. If we are victorious there we need have little fear of victory in
the other battle.”
Davis: “One would expect a continued revival and spiritual growth among the people
who had experienced such a reversal in political and military trends; however, such was
not the case. As the Philistines and Ammonites began to apply additional pressure on
the borders of Israel, rather than turning to God, the children of Israel sought out a
human leader to provide military victory.”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 8:1-22
BIG IDEA:
GOD’S PEOPLE HAVE A TRAGIC HISTORY OF REJECTING GOD’S
LEADERSHIP MODEL FOR A PRAGMATIC, WORLDLY MODEL OF THEIR
OWN CHOOSING
INTRODUCTION:
Everybody loves a superstar. Nothing wrong with Michael Jordan … greatest
basketball player of all time. Spawned a whole series of TV commercials – Nike,
Gatorade … you name it … a whole generation of kids growing up with the mentality:
“I wanna be like Mike!” The problem comes when we take a Superstar paradigm and
apply it to the realm of spiritual leadership with no regard for God’s revealed model.
- We are going to look at the will of the people back in the days of Samuel when Israel
rejected God’s design for theocratic rule and demanded a king like all the other nations
around them.
- Then we are going to make application to God’s people today in the context of the
local church where God’s clearly revealed pattern of plurality of elder government has
been replaced by the Superstar Syndrome of a Senior Pastor model with helper elders.
My thesis will be that these 2 situations (which in both instances became the norm
rather than the exception for God’s people) are remarkably parallel. For some reason,
God’s people are incredibly blind to the warnings and the exhortations which God
provides in this crucial area.
However, God is gracious to continue to work and bless in a program that at best can be
called “Second Best.” Deviation in this one area is not a fatal flaw for either the nation
of Israel or the local church. There are many other criteria for God’s favor and
blessing. However, that doesn’t excuse us from seeking God’s best in this area as well
and expecting that despite our natural pragmatic thinking to the contrary, God’s way
will actually turn out to be most fruitful when judged from God’s perspective.
Same problem that Eli experienced – his sons lacked the character for the job
Deffinbaugh: “At first glance, it seems as though only the elders of Israel are
demanding a king. As the chapter unfolds, it is very clear that all of the people of Israel
are behind this movement to have a king. This indicates to me that Israel is functioning
here somewhat as a democracy. Their elders are not leading, as much as they are
representing the people.”
B. (:6) The Discerning Ear of the Prophet of God Immediately Recognizes Deviation
from God’s Program
1. (:6a) Immediate Reaction on the Part of Samuel
“But the thing was displeasing in the sight of Samuel …”
Victor Yap: “Samuel was feeling deeply hurt, backed into a corner, and disrespected in
the worst way. No one came to his defense, all elders had the same thinking, and
options were not on the table. He did not threaten to quit or call it quits, announce or
take an early retirement, or leave without a word or trace. He didn’t think it was
necessary, time, or wise, but Samuel did was what his mother did, what he saw his
mother did, and what he had learned to do all his life -- when he led the revival early in
his ministry (1 Sam 7:5), when he underwent this crisis midway in his ministry (1 Sam
8:6), and when he bid them farewell in his twilight years (1 Sam 12:19, 23)-; he prayed.
Samuel was attested by prophet Jeremiah as a great man of prayer (Jer 15:1).”
b. Graciousness of Warning
“however, you shall solemnly warn them and tell them of the
procedure of the king who will reign over them.”
III. (:10-18) GOD’S WARNINGS ABOUT LEADERSHIP ABUSE FALL ON
DEAF EARS – THE HIGH COST OF KINGSHIP
Interesting that the Messiah would come to present Himself as the rightful King of the
Jews but would be rejected by His own people. He would have none of these negative
qualities of monarchy and yet would not be recognized as legitimate.
C. (:18) The Deaf Ear of God When You Realize Your Plight
(the pain of being stuck with your bad decision)
you will have to sleep in the bed which you have made
Don’t put yourself in the position of God saying “I told you so”
When someone asks? “Who’s the pastor at your church?” We like to say: “Pastor X --
who is very impressive in XYZ” rather than try to explain: “In reality the Lord Jesus
Christ is our Shepherd. He is working through a number of undershepherds (pastors,
bishops, overseers, elders) who operate under His designated authority and who use
their manifold spiritual gifts to provide the leadership and direction we need.”
Guzik: “God told Samuel to fulfill the people’s request. This was not because their
request was good or right, but because God was going to teach Israel through this.
Sometimes, when we insist of having something bad, God will allow us to have it, and
then learn the consequences.”
Very sad watershed in the history of Israel. Theocratic rule was never again even an
option until the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ.
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Sometimes do we pray with perseverance and persistence for the wrong things? Has
God ever given you what you asked for and then you were distressed with the
consequences? Are we careful to pray: “Thy will be done?” Do our children
sometimes nag us and try to break down our resistance so that we will just give in?
Why did God relent here and let the people have their own stubborn way?
2) How does God in His sovereignty bring good even out of our bad decisions and our
stubbornness and rebellion?
3) What type of tyranny have you been experiencing in your life? Tyranny of
leadership of some type… tyranny of your own sinfulness … tyranny of some form of
addiction … How does God offer deliverance from such tyranny?
4) Do you see the same parallel application that I do to church government issues?
**********
Baxter: “So then, the people claimed and exercised what in these days is called ‘the
right of self-determination.’ The change-over from theocracy to monarchy was of
themselves. God gave them a king and constituted a kingship. The fact would seem to
be that Israel had wearied of a theocratic form of government which made their well-
being dependent on their right conduct. Perhaps they vaguely supposed that a
government under a human king would relieve them somewhat of this responsibility,
inasmuch as their well-being would rest more with the character of the government and
the qualities of the king himself.”
Davis: “The people persisted in their demands, desiring political compatibility and
jurisprudence which would be similar to that of their neighbors. They also wanted a
warrior who would lead them against the encroachments of the Ammonites to the east
(v. 20; cf. 12:12). Samuel was commanded to listen to the voice of the people and to
give them a king (v. 22).”
David Guzik : “Samuel was one of the most godly men in the entire Bible. He is never
specifically said to sin. Yet, this may be a sin on his part. We never have the pattern of
judges being appointed by men, or of the office of judge being passed from father to
son. Samuel was not right in appointing his sons judges over Israel. . .
What was the difference between a king and a judge? A judge was a leader raised up by
God, usually to meet a specific need in a time of crisis. When the crisis was over,
usually the judge just went back to doing what he was doing before. A king not only
held his office as king as long as he lived; he also passed his throne down to his
descendants.
In addition, a judge would not have a ‘government.’ He was there to meet a specific
need in a time of crisis. A king would establish a standing government, with a
bureaucracy, which is both a blessing and a curse to any people.
In Judges 8, Gideon was offered the throne over Israel. He refused it, saying ‘I will not
rule over you, nor shall my son rule over you; the Lord shall rule over you.’ (Judges
8:23) This was the heart of all the judges, and why Israel went some 400 years in the
Promised Land without a king.”
A joke on the management of cows has been circulating for many years under the
subject “World Economics,?“World Politics,?or “World Ideologies?
Communism: You have two cows. The government takes both, milks them, keeps the
milk, and gives you a pint.
Socialism: The government takes one of your cows and gives it to a neighbor.
Fascism: The government takes both your cows and shoots one of them.
Nazism: The government takes both cows and shoots you.
Capitalism: You milk both cows, sell one of the cows, and buy a bull.
Bureaucracy: The government takes both cows, milks them, and pours the milk down
the drain.
Frank Gallagher: Christian “Celebrities” - Christians sometimes have a tendency to
treat certain believers as “celebrities.” These men might be evangelists, pastors, Bible
teachers, writers, and musicians. They sometimes are the leaders of Christian
organizations. We can respect such men for the job they are doing, but shouldn’t view
them or treat them better than we might treat other believers.
But the word “tyranny” was pretty common in the political discourse of the day when
our nation was founded. In fact, one of the flags that was flown by colonial patriots in
the American Revolution said this, “Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God.” Or,
maybe you’ve heard that quote by Thomas Paine, a professional fomenter of revolution,
“The tree of liberty must from time to time be refreshed with the blood of patriots and
tyrants.” The Mel Gibson movie, The Patriot, set in that era, had his character, a
reluctant warrior, say something like, “It remains to be seen whether it is better to be
ruled by one tyrant a thousand miles away, or by a thousand tyrants one mile away.” . . .
What I want to tell you is this. We’ve been looking at a pretty sad story, a sad story that
is made all the worse in that mankind has repeated it over and over again and suffered
for it. But it doesn’t end here. Eventually, God says enough is enough and He does
away with the king of rejection, and installs the king of God’s own choosing, David.
That is the pattern. Rejection of God leads to tyranny, leads to extreme human
suffering, leads to God being moved with compassion to bring deliverance, to bring in
the King He Himself has chosen. Tyranny and bondage are the darkest and blackest of
nights. But morning comes. With the dawn of God’s mercy, the sun rises and the light
shines again. I’m wondering where you are in that pattern. Rejection, tyranny,
suffering, the deliverance of God through a new King. I firmly believe that our own
nation is moving from rejection into tyranny. Minus a wondrous outpouring of the
Spirit in revival and reformation, the night is almost upon us.
TEXT: 1 Samuel 9:1-27
BIG IDEA:
GOD SOVEREIGNLY GUIDES IN THE SELECTION OF SAUL TO BE KING
– GIVING THE PEOPLE WHAT THEY HAD DEMANDED
Important Principle: Man looks at the outward appearance but God looks at the heart.
Saul had a lot going for him; so much potential; yet such a bad ending.
Hamby: “When we choose less than God’s best he still does not abandon us. It grieved
God and his prophet Samuel that Israel demanded a king. Samuel was sent to reason
with Israel but they replied, ‘No, we want a king like all the other nations.’ They
thought that they knew what was best, they took counsel of their own hearts and having
chosen a course independent of God, they proceeded at once to follow it up. Sometimes
the severest judgment God can give us is to let us have our own way. And yet even
when we reject God’s best he does not forsake his people. Most of us are painfully
aware that things would be far better in our lives if they had made wiser decisions. I
believe that it is especially frustrating to realize what they are going through now is the
result of poor past decision in our lives, times when we settled for less than God’s best.”
Mathew: “Let me make an application right here to you who are not yet married. I
know what you are looking for--someone who is tall, blond, slender, athletic, blue-eyed,
and tanned. The modern Christian has no interest in the heart. There is a fluttering and a
rush, but whether an individual fears God and obeys him implicitly--the divine
qualification--is not what most people are using as criteria for a spouse. Most people
judge by outward appearances.”
I. (:3-10) SEARCHING FOR DONKEYS – OCCASION FOR SEEKING OUT
THE MAN OF GOD --
GOD SOVEREIGNLY GUIDES OUR EVERYDAY RESPONSIBILITIES TO
FULFILL HIS WILL
Amazing that Saul had occasion to seek out Samuel.
Faithfulness of Saul to follow out his father’s instructions and give this mission his best
effort (:3).
Concern not to alarm his father by extending the search more than was prudent (:5).
Concern over the proper protocol to approach the man of God with the appropriate
gifts, etc. (:7).
Providential to find him at home in the city since he traveled all over in his capacity as
judge.
Deffinbaugh: “Samuel, Saul, and his servant make their way up to the high place, where
he gives them the place of honor at the head of all the invited guests. Samuel is a man
of faith. When God informs him that the king will come on the following day (9:16),
Samuel makes reservations for him as the honored guest of the sacrificial meal (9:23-
24). He has the cook set apart the choicest portion, telling him to serve it when
instructed to do so (when the promised king appears). When Saul and his servant are
seated, Samuel instructs the cook to bring out the portion which has been set aside in
expectation of his arrival. The man who appears to be an unexpected drop- in is in fact,
expected and none other than the guest of honor.”
Guzik: “We might imagine that Samuel was very interested to see how Saul would react
when he was honored this way. Often, the way one reacts when they are honored shows
what kind of person they really are. If they receive the honor humbly, without regarding
it too much or becoming proud about it, it says something good about them. But if they
show a false humility or a proud heart in the way they receive the honor, it shows
something bad in their character.”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Do we view all the details of our life as part of the tightly woven fabric of God’s
Providential leading and guidance? Do we respond to our chance encounters with
others as though they were divine appointments?
2) What does this passage teach us about the compassion and patience of God in
dealing with our stubbornness and poor decisions? How gracious was God to Samuel
to provide such clear revelation and confirmation of how the transition in leadership
should take place?
3) Are we flexible and open enough in our thinking to accept the advice of others –
especially when those individuals are clearly in some type of subordinate role?
4) Do you think Samuel would have found it difficult to accept God’s verdict of
replacing his sons in a position of leadership with this unknown Benjaminite?
**********
Hamby: “God had a plan for the life of his nation Israel, but Israel thought they
understood better what they needed than God did. They wanted a king, and they wanted
one for all the wrong reasons. They wanted to be like the other nations. When we as
God’s people desire more than anything else to be like the other people of this world we
are in trouble. When we know what God wants in our lives and yet chose to go another
direction we are very best, choosing second best. We need to recognize tonight that
God’s will for our lives, is what we would choose if we could see clearly. God’s will is
not to make our lives miserable but to make our lives fulfilled.”
Deffinbaugh: “Saul’s father, Kish, is a Benjamite of some reputation. Our text informs
us that he is a ‘mighty man of valor’ (9:1). This expression can be understood to refer to
a man’s courage, his military skill and success, or even his wealth. He is, for one reason
or many, a man of renown. Saul comes from good stock. And while Saul has not yet
established a reputation for himself, he has all the physical attributes which will stand
him in good stead with the people. In short, he is what our teenage daughters would call
a ‘hunk.’ He is tall (taller than any other Israelite), dark (people in that part of the world
usually are – and since he works out in the fields, he would have an awesome tan), and
handsome. It will take much more than this, however, for Saul to fulfill his calling as
king.”
Guzik: “There are two mistakes people make regarding God’s guidance through
circumstances. One mistake is to think every event of our lives is heavy with meaning
from God. This is wrong, because though nothing happens by accident, not everything
happens for a great purpose. The second mistake is to ignore the moving of God in our
lives through circumstances. God wanted to use this situation to guide Saul, and God
will often use circumstances in our lives the same way. We need to trust in God’s
goodness and in His ability to make all things work together for good (Romans 8:28).”
Blaikie : “God’s providence is a wonderful scheme; a web of many threads, woven with
marvelous skill; a network composed of all kinds of materials, great and small, but so
arranged that the very smallest of them is as essential as the largest to the completeness
of the fabric.
One would suppose that many of the dramas of the Old Testament were planned on
very purpose to show how intimately things secular and things sacred, as we call them,
are connected together; how entirely the minutest events are controlled by God, and at
the same time how thoroughly the freedom of man is preserved. The meeting of two
convicts in an Egyptian prison is a vital link in the chain of events that makes Joseph
governor of Egypt; a young lady coming to bathe in the river preserves the life of
Moses, and secures the escape of the Israelites; the thoughtful regard of a father for the
comfort of his sons in the army brings David into contact with Goliath, and prepares the
way for his elevation to the throne; the beauty of a Hebrew girl fascinating a Persian
king saves the whole Hebrew race from massacre and extermination.
So in the passage now before us. The straying of some asses from the pastures of a
Hebrew farmer brings together the two men, of whom the one was the old ruler, and the
other was to be the new ruler of Israel. That these two should meet, and that the older
of them should have the opportunity of instructing and influencing the younger, was of
the greatest consequence for the future welfare of the nation. And the meeting is
brought about in that casual way that at first sight seems to indicate that all things
happen without plan or purpose. Yet we find, on more careful examination, that every
event has been planned to fit in to every other, as carefully as the pieces of a dissected
map, or the fragments of a fine mosaic. But of all the actors in the drama, not one ever
feels that his freedom is in any way interfered with. All of them are at perfect liberty to
follow the course that commends itself to their own minds.”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 10:1-27
BIG IDEA:
THE ANOINTING OF GOD’S CHOSEN LEADER WAS A MIXED BLESSING
IN MANY RESPECTS – YET CLEARLY A DIVINE APPOINTMENT
Roper: “Prior to this there were only two occasions when anointings took place. Priests
were anointed, and the sanctuary was anointed. Anointing with oil is a symbol of the
pouring out of the Spirit of God upon someone. It is a sign of God's approval. It is a seal
that a person is pleasing to him, and that therefore he is pouring himself out upon that
person. And now God, in this very picturesque way, is showing Saul that his pleasure
rests upon him, that he is instituting the monarchy, establishing Saul as the king. Then
there follow three signs which Samuel gives Saul which are confirmatory of his
anointing.”
B. (:3-4) Confirming Sign #2 – God Can Provide Our Daily Bread (Material Needs)
Gift of 2 loaves of bread
C. (:5-6) Confirming Sign #3 – God Can Transform and Empower for Service
Saul joins the ranks of the prophets
D. (:7-8) Final Instructions / Pivotal Test
1. (:7) Final Instructions
Bank on the promise that “God is with you” – this should free you to take the
appropriate action in any situation
D. (:13) Transition –
“When he had finished prophesying, he came to the high place.”
Gordon: “To this point Saul’s appointment has been kept secret; now, in response to the
earlier demand of the tribal elders (8:4-22), Samuel convenes a public assembly at
which Saul can be presented as God’s choice as king. But the new ruler will not
necessarily be welcomed on Samuel’s say-so, and the process of election by lot will
have to be undergone so that there will be no doubt as to whom God favours. Even
with this precaution there will be some who will question the appropriateness of the
choice (v. 27).”
2. Divinely selected
“Do you see him whom the Lord has chosen?”
3. Charismatic presence
“Surely there is no one like him among all the people”
2. Rejection by a Few
“But certain worthless men said, ‘How can this one deliver us?’ And
they despised him and did not bring him any present.”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Do we have a sense of how precious we are to the Lord? Note how in vs. 1, God’s
people are called “His inheritance” and God’s anointed leaders must show respect and
consideration for their responsibility over such a precious group of people.
2) Why did God choose to focus on the function of prophesying as such a prominent
role for the third and final confirming sign? What is so special about prophesying?
3) What is the significance of the proverb in vs. 12 – “Is Saul also among the
prophets?”
4) Note how Saul responded to criticism and opposition. Do we get defensive in those
types of situations? Are we able to “hold our peace” and take matters up with the
Lord?
**********
Blaikie : “The event was a very important one, as showing the pains that were taken to
impress him with the solemnity of the office, and his obligation to undertake it in full
accord with God’s sacred purpose in connection with His people Israel. Everything was
planned to impress on Saul that his elevation to the royal dignity was not to be viewed
by him as a mere piece of good fortune, and to induce him to enter on the office with a
solemn sense of responsibility, and in a spirit entirely different from that of the
neighboring kings, who thought only of their royal position as enabling them to gratify
the desires of their own hearts. Both Saul and the people must see the hand of God very
plainly in Saul’s elevation, and the king must enter on his duties with a profound sense
of the supernatural influences through which he has been elevated, and his obligation to
rule the people in the fear, and according to the will, of God.”
Jeffries:
"The Israelites chose their first king by casting lots or by using the Urim and
Thummim, two plates or flat stones carried by the high priest. The fact that Saul
was chosen may seem like luck, but it was really the opposite. God had instructed
the Israelites to make the Urim and Thummim for the specific purpose of
consulting Him in times such as this ( Exodus 28:30; Numbers 27:12-21 ). By
using the Urim and Thummim, the Israelites were taking the decision out of their
own hands and turning it over to God."
- Notes on I Samuel 10:20, New Geneva Study Bible
Roper: “Do you see what God promised? Here was a young man who had been
anointed as king over Israel, and God promised him three things. First, his peace of
mind - freedom from all the little things which would keep him from being a king,
information which would give him quietness of heart, which would settle him down and
calm his spirit so that he would be able to occupy himself with things which were really
significant - the peace of God. The second thing was daily provision, bread to meet his
needs when he needed it - perhaps at the moment of extremity, but yet adequate
resources in time of need. And third, a supernatural endowment, power from on high
which would enable him to do things which were extraordinary, for which he was not
qualified. He would become a prophet in Israel. He was well qualified for the task, but
his sufficiency came not from himself but from God, ‘who has made us sufficient,’ as
Paul said. It wasn't his size, it wasn't his strength, it wasn't his natural capabilities which
qualified him. He was just a vessel to be filled and flooded with God, given God's
peace, God's provision, God's power. And God said, ‘Whatever you have to do, Saul,
do it! whatever the occasion demands, I am with you, whether it is a small thing or a
great thing.’
We too are anointed as kings. God has intended us to reign over life - over our bodies,
over our passions, over our environment, over every aspect of life. And we too are
given these three things. We are given the peace of God - information from God's word
and God's Spirit which sets us at ease, gives us peaceful, quiet hearts, so that we are not
being enervated and drained by thinking about all the worrisome little things that occur
in our life. We are free from worrying so that we can get on with our kingly task.
Secondly, we are given provision. Paul says, ‘My God shall supply all your needs
according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus.’ Whatever you need, there is provision
for it And third, there is power, power to do the extraordinary, power to act contrary to
your nature, power to face any foe - even the garrison of Philistines which is located
right there in your hometown - adequate power. And God says, ‘Whatever you have to
do, do it, and I will be with you.’"
Roe: “If God commits himself to Saul, fills him with the Spirit ‘mightily’, allows him
to prophesy, to become a prophet of God and changes his heart, who, then, is
responsible for the failure of Saul? It cannot be God. So, do not ever accuse God of
causing you to fail. We are going to see that Saul does exactly that. Whatever God calls
you to do, God equips you to do. Saul understands where the power lies to do the job.
Saul, who does not come from a school of prophets, [in fact the people question what he
is doing when he prophesies] is allowed to experience the indwelling power of God
in a way he has never experienced in his whole life. He gets a taste of what could be his
if he obeys. God really wants Saul to succeed. He does not like for Christians to fail.
He is a loving father. Therefore, before He does anything with regard to Saul's
kingship, he lets Saul understand all the power of God is at his disposal if he chooses.”
Kapteyn:
“Samuel wants to present their first king to the people. But there is a problem. Saul is
missing, he is not to be found. Where is he? Did he not show up? The Lord knows
where Saul is. And He tells the people ‘He has hidden himself among the
baggage.’
As we will see Samuel knew that He had been chosen by God to be king, but he hid
hoping that he could avoid this task that God had given him.
This morning I have a question that each one of you must answer, to God and to
yourselves. Are you hiding among the baggage? As individuals and therefore together
as a church?
As we look at Saul, let us ask ourselves, ‘Can I can see any similarities between Saul
and myself?’ ‘Am I hiding among the baggage?’”
[Kapteyn goes on to list the type of baggage which Saul possessed that kept him from
stepping to the plate in faith and showing himself ready to tackle the responsibility to
which God had called him and for which he had been equipped.]
Young: Re vs. 25 – “As Moses had written the law for the community of Israel, so
Samuel now wrote the constitution of the theocratic kingdom. This constitution has
never been located. It would be interesting to read the rules and regulations set forth by
Samuel.”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 11:1-15
BIG IDEA:
KING SAUL WINS OVER HIS CRITICS BY PROVING HIS MILITARY
LEADERSHIP WITH A SPIRIT-INSPIRED RESCUE OPERATION
INTRODUCTION:
How does a leader gain the respect of his people and prove his mettle? It has to
be by performance under pressure – not by appointment or decree. There will always
be an element of opposition – a band of critics who are waiting to pounce on perceived
weakness and mistakes. Crushing victories are an opportunity to silence those critics –
at least for a season – and galvanize the support of the people. How a leader responds
to the thrill of victory and the enthusiastic support of his followers tells a lot about his
character.
Why not humble themselves before God and repent of their sins and seek His
deliverance? Why cave so quickly?
Blaikie : “Yet how often do men virtually give themselves over to serve a vile master, to
lead evil or at least careless lives, to indulge in sinful habits which they know they
should overcome, but which they are too indolent and self- indulged to resist! Men and
women, with strong proclivities to sin, may for a time resist, but they get tired of the
battle; they long for an easier life … They surrender to the enemy, they are willing to
serve sin, because they will not surrender the ease and the pleasures of sin.”
Davis: “The Ammonites were evidently sure of victory as evidenced by the nature of
their proposal… This concession illustrated the contemptuous regard which he had for
the fighting strength of Israel.”
Guzik: “Why did Nahash let the messengers go? It seems strange that he allowed them
to leave, and to see if Israel could muster up the troops to come and defeat him. But
Nahash had two reasons. First, he was confident of Israel’s disunity, and figured they
would be unable to find anyone to save them. Second, by allowing the messengers to go
through all Israel, he was making his name big and his reputation fearsome throughout
the whole nation. ”
B. (:5-7) The Spirit-Inspired Response of Anger and Action on the Part of Saul
1. (:5a) The Patience of Saul
“Now behold, Saul was coming from the field behind the oxen”
Blaikie : “We are hardly prepared to find Saul following the herd in the field after his
election as king of Israel. We are compelled to conclude that the opposition to him was
far from contemptible in number and in influence, and that he found it expedient in the
meantime to make no demonstration of royalty, but continue his old way of life.”
4. (:7) Spirit-Inspired Action – Rallying the Troops / Instilling the Fear of God
Result: “they came out as one man”
That is always the goal of any leader – to get your troops to perform as
one man
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) How strong is your resolve to fight against the tyranny of sin and enslavement?
How quick are you to draw upon the resources of God rather than just throwing in the
towel? Do you really understand the power of the Spirit- filled life?
2) When have you seen the Lord stir you up to righteous anger so that you took action
against some particular sin or injustice?
3) How do you respond to your critics? Are you out for revenge and vengeance? Do
you want to make them pay and see them humiliated? Do you have self control in how
you respond to them? Do you look to the Lord to exalt you in His timing?
4) How do you use the leadership quality of exhortation to motivate people to a spirit
of unity and action against our spiritual enemies so that we accomplish the task ahead
of us?
**********
Davis: “The Ammonites, descendants of Lot (Gen. 19:38), continued their belligerency
toward the tribes settled in the eastern territories of Israel. It was the Ammonite
military threat under the leadership of Nahash, among other things, that caused Israel to
demand a king (cf. I Sam. 12:12). Nahash gave the people of Jabesh-gilead seven days
to agree to his terms of surrender which involved the thrus ting out of the right eye of
the inhabitants of that city (11:2-3). The savagery of these peoples is elsewhere seen in
Amos 1:13. The loss of the right eye had military implications, for it would disable the
men of that city for military duty since the left eye was usually covered by the shield in
battle and the right eye used to spot the enemy. This practice has also been attested in
Ugaritic literature.”
Deffinbaugh: At this very moment, Samuel summons the people to Gilgal, where they
will “renew the kingdom” (11:14). Saul is made king, sacrifices are made before the
Lord, and the “men of Israel rejoiced greatly” (11:15). But what is this matter of
“renewing the kingdom”? If Saul is Israel’s first king, then he is their “new” king. How
then can they “renew the kingdom” by making Saul king?
I have concluded that Samuel is not speaking of “renewing” the new kingdom, which
had been inaugurated with the installation of Saul as king, but rather of “renewing”
God’s kingdom, with God as King, as first established at the exodus. There are two
strong reasons for this. First, there is the overall message and emphasis of chapter 12,
which we will consider momentarily. Second, the “renewal” is to take place at Gilgal,
and not at Mizpah (see 7:5ff.). Gilgal is the city located just across (west of) the Jordan
River. It is the place where the Israelites first crossed the Jordan and entered into the
promised land, the place where the memorial of 12 stones was built. It is the place
where the (second- generation) Israelites were circumcised and where Israel renewed her
covenant with God (see Joshua 4 and 5). Gilgal is the place from which the “angel of
the Lord” came to remind the Israelites of their deliverance at the exodus, their
covenant with God, and the reason for their struggle with the nations surrounding them
(Judges 2:1-5). It is also one of the cities on Samuel’s circuit (1 Samuel 7:16) and the
place where Samuel instructs Saul to wait for him (1 Samuel 10:8). Gilgal is a city
closely related to God’s covenant with Israel.
Carr:
A TIME OF VICTORY
We tend to think of Saul's reign as King of Israel a total failure. However, there
were a few times of precious victory. Here is a time when Saul did what was right,
and God blessed.
URGENCY OF THE MOMENT - Vss. 1-4
UNCTION OF THE LEADER - Vss. 5-6
UNITY OF THE PEOPLE - Vss. 7-10
UNLEASHING OF GOD'S POWER - Vs. 11
UNDERSTANDING THE VICTORY - Vss. 12-13
Some wanted Saul's enemies put to death. Saul understood that the day was not a
day of vengeance, but a day of rejoicing in what God had done.
Terry Sisney:
There are 3 classes of people in this message this morning:
#1 Those who are willing to give up their right eyes
#2 Those who are hopelessly and helplessly weeping over the sad condition of losing
their right eye.
#3 Those who are filled with holy hatred and anger against sin and Satan, and move to
bring deliverance to the oppressed, because they have not given up their right eye, and
they have a covenant with God, and God’s power flows through their lives.
Guzik:
We can see in this account a similarity between Satan, our spiritual enemy, and Nahash,
the enemy of Israel.
i. Satan attacks us, but cannot do anything against us without our agreement. He asks
for, and requires our surrender.
ii. Satan wants us to serve him, and will attempt to intimidate us into giving in to him.
iii. Satan wants to humiliate us, and exalt himself over us. Through humiliating one
saint, Satan wants to bring reproach on all God’s people.
iv. Satan wants to take away our ability to effectively fight against him.
v. Satan wants to blind us, and if he cannot blind us completely, he will blind us
partially.
BIG IDEA:
FORMER TRANSGRESSIONS DO NOT DOOM YOU TO PRESENT FAILURE
AS LONG AS YOU CHOOSE TO FEAR THE LORD AND SERVE HIM RIGHT
NOW
INTRODUCTION:
How does my past affect my potential for God’s blessing in the present? That is
a common question. People feel that they have blown it so badly in the past that there
is no way that God can ever bless them again. So why even try to fear God and walk in
faith and obedience? Sense of hopelessness and despair … No people frustrated God
more than His chosen nation of Israel. Their history documents the consistent pattern
of God’s blessing and protection followed by the people’s idolatry and departure from
His ways. Samuel addresses that situation here as he provides hope for a fickle nation
and yet warns them at the same time.
Piper: “Then in chapter 12 comes Samuel's inauguration speech, and it was not exactly
what the people wanted to hear! He does have some astonishingly good news for them.
But before he tells them he wants to make sure that they know and feel the magnitude
of the evil they have done in wanting to be like the other nations and being dissatisfied
with God as their king. ”
B. (:1b-2a) He Provided the King Which the People Wanted – Transfer of Political
Leadership
“I have appointed a king over you. And now, here is the king walking before
you.”
Difficult thing for a leader to transfer power.
D. (:4-5) He Received the Stamp of Approval from the People (Witnessed by God)
“You have not defrauded us, or oppressed us, or taken anything from any man’s
hand”
(in contrast to the ministry of Eli’s sons or even his own sons)
Guzik: “Why does Samuel do what seems to be a purely self- justifying and self-
glorifying thing? From what we know of the character of Samuel in other passages, we
have to believe this is more than him saying, ‘Look at how good I am.’ Instead, it seems
that Samuel wants the nation to know that he has passed a good legacy of leadership to
the new king Saul. He wants Israel to recognize that he hasn’t handed Saul a mess that
he has to clean up. If Saul should prove to be a poor leader, no one could say it was
because of the bad example set by Samuel.”
Blaikie : “Their existence as a people and their settlement in Canaan were due to the
special mercy of the Lord. If ever a nation owed everything to the power above, Israel
owed everything to Jehovah.”
2. The Lord’s Response: Moses and Aaron and Redemption from Egypt
3. (:9a) People’s Failure: “But they forgot the Lord their God”
C. (:16-18) Confirming Sign: Was rejecting the theocracy really such a bad thing in
the eyes of God?
“Then you will know and see that your wickedness is great which you have
done in the sight of the Lord by asking for yourselves a king.”
Guzik: “Because it was the wheat harvest, the sign displayed not only God’s power, but
His judgment also. Heavy rain during the harvest could destroy all their crops. The sign
was a warning. ‘In that part of the world not only is rain in harvest . . . not fitting (Prov.
26:1), it is so totally unexpected that it could easily be interpreted as a sign of divine
displeasure.’ (Youngblood)”
Davis: “A special sign was given to confirm the validity of this message. Thunder and
rain came during the time of the wheat harvest, which was most unusual since the wheat
harvest came about the end of May and early June, long after the latter rain.”
People ask the same thing today: Is this plurality of elder thing really such a big deal?
Can’t we just set up any form of church government which makes sense to us and
which we feel has the best chance for success?
Deffinbaugh: “The Israelites look upon their king as their deliverer. In their minds, this
king is the key to success. They believe he will deliver them from their oppressors, and
he will bring the nation into prosperity. God reminds Israel that, ultimately, He is both
the source of their distress, and He is the source of their blessings. Calamity comes
upon the nation because of their sin. Blessing does not come upon the nation for its
righteousness, but because of God’s mercy and grace. Their prosperity is not due to
Israel’s doing good, but because in Israel’s suffering, she cries out to God for
deliverance. Israel’s devotion to God and her serving Him is the outgrowth of God’s
grace, not the source of God’s blessings. . .
The Israelites have placed too much stock in their new king, and Samuel’s words and
deeds put this into its proper perspective . . .”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) How can the power of Samuel’s ministry be traced back to his consistent pattern of
fervent prayer? To what extent has prayer been minimized in our time with the
resulting lack of power in various ministries? Do we cons ider prayerlessness a sin as
Samuel did (vs. 23)?
2) Compare Samuel’s concern with his own reputation in ministry with the Lord’s
concern for the reputation of His name. Why is a good reputation so essential? How
does it give Samuel a solid foundation on which to challenge the people to godliness?
Are we being careful to walk in integrity and protect our good name?
3) What does this passage contribute to our theology of divine election, of the grace
and mercy of God, of His readiness to forgive and yet His holiness and righteousness to
execute judgment as required?
4) How can we stir God’s people up to a greater fear of Him in this day when God is
spoken of so casually and sin is redefined in more palatable terms?
**********
Davis: “The judges listed in verse 11 present special difficulties. Jerubbaal is, of
course, identified with Gideon (Judg. 6:25-32). The name ‘Bedan’ is problematic
because this name does not appear in the book of Judges. It has been supposed by some
that this is a reference to a lesser judge whose deeds were not officially recorded. This
view, however, appears to be unlikely in view of the nature of Samuel’s argument. The
others listed are rather imposing personalities connected with specific and important
events. What purpose would the name of an unknown judge serve in his argument?
Perhaps the best explanation for the appearance of this name is that it represents a
copyist’s error in the text for the name Barak. The Syriac, Septuagint and Arabic
versions have all adopted the latter name.”
Blaikie : “Samuel, moreover, reminds them that it was not they that had chosen God; it
was God that had chosen them… This was a great ground of comfort for Israel. The
eternal God had chosen them and made them His people for great purposes of His own.
It was involved in this very choice and purpose of God that he would keep His hand on
them, and preserve them from all such calamities as would prevent them from fulfilling
His purpose. Fickle and changeable, they might easily be induced to break away from
Him; but, strong and unchangeable, He could never be induced to abandon His purpose
in them. And if this was a comfort to Israel then, there is a corresponding comfort to
the spiritual Israel now. If my heart is in any measure turned to God, to value His
favour and seek to do His will, it is God that has effected the change. And this shows
that God has a purpose with me.”
Piper: “But that is not the deepest foundation of hope and fearlessness in this verse.
Why will God not cast away his people? The deepest reason given is in the phrase, ‘For
his great name's sake.’ The rock bottom foundation of our forgiveness and our
fearlessness and our joy is the commitment that God has to his own great name. First,
he is committed to act for his own name's sake. And then, for that reason, he is
committed to act for his people . . .
In other words, when every other hope was gone and the people lay under the
judgment of God himself because of their own sin, one hope remained -- and it will
always remain -- that God has an indomitable delight in the worth of his own reputation
and will not suffer it to be trodden down for long. . .
At the bottom of all our hope, when everything else has given way, we stand on this
great reality: the everlasting, all- sufficient God is infinitely, unwaveringly and eternally
committed to his great and holy name. For the sake of his own great name he will act.
It will not be profaned for ever. The mission of the church will be victorious. He will
vindicate his people and his cause in all the earth. ”
Deffinbaugh: “Our text stands as a word of caution to those who seem to be successful.
It certainly puts the apparent ‘success’ of Saul into perspective. The people are jubilant
after Israel’s victory over the Ammonites, but they tend to look upon this ‘success’ as
the result of Saul’s leadership. In fact, this deliverance, like all others before it, is a
reflection of God’s grace, and not the evidence of magnificent leadership. Those who
seem to be successful must be careful of their definition of success, being sure to regard
every human success as the result of divine grace, not human skillfulness and wisdom.
Our text offers a word of hope and encouragement to those devastated by their sin and
failures to live up to God’s standard. Many are those who think they have failed
irreversibly, and that there is no future hope for them, so that they are tempted to give
up in their Christian life. ‘All have sinned, and fall short of the glory of God’ (Romans
3:23). By God’s standard, no man is successful, and all men are failures, deserving of
God’s eternal wrath. Our hope of salvation is not based upon our performance, but upon
God’s grace. It is ultimately not our choice of Him, but His choice of us, not our
faithfulness, but His. God is faithful. God is merciful. God is gracious. God is our
salvation. Jesus Christ came not to minister to the righteous, but to save sinners. Let all
who believe they are failures ponder the wonder of this.”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 13:1-23
BIG IDEA:
LEADERSHIP OPERATING ON THE BASIS OF EXPEDIENCY RATHER
THAN OBEDIENCE CAN WIN SOME IMPRESSIVE BATTLES BUT STILL
FORFEIT THE ULTIMATE OBJECTIVE
2. Those Rejected
“But he sent away the rest of the people, each to his tent”
Gordon: “Prior to the monarchy, the Israelites looked to their citizen militia in times of
crisis, but Saul’s establishment of a cadre of three thousand men … provides Israel with
a standing army (cf. 14:52). The immediate concern was the expulsion of Philistine
forces from the very heart of Saul’s kingdom, for all the places mentioned here were in
Benjaminite territory. Michmash lay a few miles to the south-east of Bethel.”
(Principle of counting the cost when you go into battle so that you are sure you are
prepared with the necessary resources to finish the job. Cf. the man building a tower …
you don’t want to end up with it half built; need to plan ahead)
A. Jonathan’s Surprise Attack on Geba –
“And Jonathan smote the garrison of the Philistines that was in Geba”
Blaikie : “No doubt there were faint- hearted persons in the host of Israel who would
bring hard accusations against Jonathan for disturbing the equilibrium between Israel
and the Philistines. They would shake their heads and utter solemn truisms on the
rashness of youth, and would ask if it was not a shame to entrust a stripling with such
power and responsibility. But Jonathan’s stroke was the beginning of a movement
which might have ended in the final expulsion of the Philistines from the territories of
Israel if Saul had not acted foolishly at Gilgal. In this case, it was not the young man,
but the old, that was rash and reckless. Jonathan had acted with courage and vigour,
probably also with faith; it was Saul that brought disturbance and disaster to the host.”
3. (:6-7a) Desperation Turned to Panic and Fear -- Many of the troops Ran or
Hid
4. (:7b) Saul was nervously waiting for Samuel at Gilgal – He had been given
instructions previously
“But as for Saul, he was still in Gilgal, and all the people followed him
trembling.”
II. (:8-12) SOME FAST TALKING AND POOR EXCUSES --
CHOOSING EXPEDIENCY RATHER THAN OBEDIENCE
2. (:9) Saul Minimized the Severity of His Disobedience and Took Action
Guzik: “The whole manner of Saul’s explanation makes it clear that this was no
misunderstanding. He didn’ t say to Samuel, “Did I do something wrong?” He knew
exactly what he was doing, and probably had thought of the excuses ahead of time.”
Sounds harsh and excessive to us … wasn’ t Saul just trying to do his best in difficult
circumstances?? Apparently not – for this was a test that God had designed to show the
shortcomings of Saul’s character and pave the way for the transfer of the kingdom to
David.
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) What was the relationship like between Jonathan and Saul? What type of respect
did the son have for his father? Why is Jonathan consistently portrayed as a man of
faith and action while Saul seems to have numerous problems? How would this have
affected how Saul viewed his son? How the people viewed Jonathan?
2) Why did the Lord respond so strongly to Saul’s disobedience? Why do we find this
hard to take?
3) What types of excuses have we used in the past to rationalize or justify certain
actions that violated some principle or conviction or command of God? Are we able to
convince our own conscience of the rightness of our compromise or do we remain
unconvinced?
4) Contrast David and Saul. In what sense was David a “man after God’s own heart”
while Saul proved to be out for selfish interests?
**********
Gordon: “The cities of Geba and Michmash lay on either side of a valley, with only a
couple of miles separating them. However, with but a fraction of his force still in the
field, Saul was in no position to check the Philistine raiding parties operating out of
Michmash.”
Deffinbaugh: “If we are really honest with ourselves and with our text, we will admit
that Saul’s actions do not seem to be all that bad. On the surface, it appears that Samuel
is late, that the survival of Saul and the nation is doubtful unless someone acts very
quickly, and that Saul certainly seems to be the man to do so. What is so wrong with
Saul’s actions, given Samuel’s tardiness and the Philistine threat? God, however, takes
Saul’s attitudes and actions quite seriously, and we must take them seriously as well. As
we study this text, we should seek to discern why this is so evil in God’s eyes and
determine what happened with Saul. Let us further seek to learn and apply the
principles and lessons our text conveys to Christians, for Saul’s sin is significant
enough to cost him and his heirs his kingdom forever. . .
Emergencies are not excuses for disobedience to God’s commands, but a test of
our faith and obedience. God often tests us by taking us to the limit. That is the way
we test the products we manufacture. Ford does not test its cars by gently driving them
around the block a few times. The y are put on the test track, which hammers the
suspension with endless bumps and turns and stresses the engine with high heat, severe
cold, and long distances. God tests us by taking us to the limit as well, by taking us to
the breaking point.
When we reach ‘our limit,’ our faith in God becomes apparent. When we come to the
end of our own resources, we must then trust in God. God takes Saul “to the limit” by
delaying Samuel’s arrival to the last moments, but Saul cannot wait. He is convinced
his situation is an “emergency,” and as such, the rules can be set aside. At these
moments -- when we are pressed to our limit -- our faith and obedience are tested by
whether or not we keep God’s commands, whether or not we obey Him.
Twice the Book of Proverbs speaks of the ‘lion in the road’ (see Proverbs 22:13; 26:13).
This is the sluggard’s compelling reason for avoiding a task he really does not want to
do. After all, who would be outside mowing the grass if there really was a lion out
there? Emergency situations, where disaster seems imminent and breaking the rules
seems expedient, may be nothing more than lions in the road. We may be willing to
make exceptions to God’s commands, but God is not. Let us beware of allowing a crisis
to become the excuse for our disobedience.
I doubt if Saul’s disobedience in making the burnt offerings is one isolated event.
Rather, it is likely the climax, the culmination, of a long history of disobedience. As
previously pointed out, Saul knows that his duty as Israel’s king is to do battle with the
Philistines and the other surrounding nations who oppress the people of God. Day after
day, month after month, Saul seems to close his eyes to the suffering of his people and
to the presence of the Philistines stationed in Israel. Saul’s disobedience regarding the
sacrifices at Gilgal is no sudden sin -- a complete shock to all. It is the logical, almost
inevitable outcome of a lifestyle of disobedience. This crisis only shows Saul up for
who he is (or is not). This is the way it is with us as well.
I cannot help but notice that there is no evidence of spirituality in Saul prior to his
becoming king, or afterwards. But David is a young man who learned to depend upon
God while a shepherd boy, left alone with his flock. David learned to trust God and to
worship him. He has a history of walking with God before he became king, and that
continued afterward. Saul has no godly disciplines in his life, and it shows, especially at
Gilgal when the tests of faith come upon him.”
Guzik:
“What then does it mean to be a man after His own heart? We can discover this by
looking at the man who was not a man after His own heart and comparing him to the
man who was a man after His own heart.
i. A man after God’s heart honors the Lord. Saul was more concerned with his will than
God’s will. David was a man after God’s heart in the way that he knew God’s will was
most important. Even when David didn’t do God’s will, he still knew God’s will was
more important than his own was. All sin is a disregard of God, but David sinned more
out of weakness and Saul more out of a disregard for God.
ii. A man after God’s heart enthrones God as king. For Saul, Saul was king. For David,
the Lord God was king. Both David and Saul would have thought sacrifice important
before the battle. But David thought it was important because it pleased and honored
God. Saul thought it was important because it might help him win a battle. For Saul,
God would help him achieve his goals. For David, God Himself was the goal.
iii. A man after God’s heart has a soft, repentant heart. When Saul was confronted with
his sin, he offered excuses. When David was confronted with his sin, he simply said I
have sinned against the Lord (2 Samuel 12:13).
iv. A man after God’s heart loves other people. Saul became increasingly bitter against
people and lived more and more unto himself. David was a man after God’s own heart
in the way that he loved people. When David was down and out, he still loved and
served those who were even more down and out than himself (1 Samuel 22:1-2).”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 14:1-52
TITLE: SOMETIMES LEADERS GET TOO BIG FOR THEIR OWN BRITCHES
BIG IDEA:
RASH DECISIONS ON THE PART OF LEADERSHIP CAN PLACE THEIR
TROOPS AT RISK
INTRODUCTION:
God had given Saul a taste of victory – not because of his own bravery and
effective leadership but rather because of the bold faith of his son Jonathan. Still Saul
was quick to give himself the credit and think that he could do no wrong. Instead of
being careful to inquire of the Lord, he rashly makes some decisions that are very self-
serving and that end up putting his troops at risk – damaging their strength and morale.
2. Kept Mission Secret from Saul (father and king) – did not think he would get
his permission or support
2. (:3a) Ahijah wearing priestly ephod = Potential was there to consult the Lord
Ryrie: “The ephod was used to consult God in a time of crisis. This was probably done
by means of the Urim and Thummim attached to the breastplate of the ephod (see notes
on Exod. 28:6-30). By yes and no questions the wrong choice between two alternatives
could be eliminated.”
Guzik: “This was a difficult climb. Jonathan was not the kind to say, ‘Well, it would be
nice to do this. But the rocks are steep and there are a lot of Philistines up there. Let’s
just pray instead.’ No; he got down on his hands and knees and climbed! If we only
want victory, or want to be used by God when it is easy, we won’t see much victory and
we won’t be used very much. ”
Gordon: explains that instead of the ark of the covenant, “the reading of the LXX
therefore has obvious advantage: ‘Bring the ephod.’” ???
Davis: “Some scholars feel that these individuals were probably slaves captured from
Israel in previous raids; however, it seems more likely that they were professional
soldiers or mercenaries who had sold themselves into military service. When the
Israelites were victorious, they changed their allegiance and fought with Saul.”
E. (:23) Summary:
“So the Lord delivered Israel that day, and the battle spread beyond Bethaven.”
Ryrie: “So desirous was Saul of avenging himself against his enemies that he neglected
the needs of his own men and swore a foolish oath which almost cost the life of his
son.”
B. (:25-26) Unnecessary Problem for the People: Hunger and Weakness where God
had provided Sustenance and Strength
“behold, there was a flow of honey; but no man put his hand to his mouth, for
the people feared the oath.”
C. (:27-28) Unnecessary Problem for Jonathan: Ignorance of the Rash Regulation
Led to Culpable Violation
1. Consequence of Disobedience: “his eye brightened”
Bottom Line: Saul’s rash leadership cost the Israelites an opportunity to achieve an
even greater victory.
Guzik: “On this day of battle, because of Saul’s foolish command, the people were so
hungry they broke this command. Their obedience to Saul’s foolish command led them
to disobey God’s clearly declared command. This is always the result of legalism!”
C. (:33) The Leader Deflects Criticism by Pointing the Finger of Blame at the People
Even though he had weakened them and made them vulnerable to the temptation
D. (:34-35) The Leader Can Use the Trappings of Religion to Disguise His Own Guilt
Significant: “It was the first altar that he built to the Lord”
2. Admirable that Saul wants to first inquire of the Lord and discern His will
(although maybe this was at the prompting of the priest)
3. Admirable that Saul recognized that there was a problem that needed to be
addressed before proceeding
But blind to the reality that the problem was with his own pride rather
than the ceremonial violation in ignorance by his brave son of the faith.
B. (:38-43) God Is Willing to Expose Sin if We Let Him – the Casting of Lots
Why didn’t Jonathan just step forward and confess?
Blaikie : “All this shows Saul plunging and floundering from one mistake to another,
and crowning his blunders by a proposal so outrageous that the indignation of the
people arrests his purpose. The idea that the work of the day shall be wound up by the
execution of the youth through whom all the wonderful deliverance has come, and that
youth Saul’s own son, is one that could never have entered into any but a distempered
brain. Reason seems to have begun to stagger on her throne; the sad process has begun
which in a more advanced stage left Saul the prey of an evil spirit, and in its last and
most humiliating stage drove him to consult with the witch of Endor.”
Yet having said all that … it must be noted that OT saints had a very high regard for
any type of oath sworn before the Lord … so the foolishness lies more in the oath itself
than in the execution of the punishment.
1. Moabites
2. Ammonites
3. Edomites
4. Zobahites
6. Philistines
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) When have the decisions of your spiritual leaders put you under unnecessary
pressure? When have you been pushed too hard? How did you respond? Why
motivates leaders to make those types of mistakes?
3) How do we use religious forms to try to bail us out of difficulty instead of truly
humbling ourselves and seeking God with our whole heart?
4) What type of military and political leader was Saul? What were his strengths and
weaknesses.
**********
Blaikie : “And thus the faith of Jonathan had a glorious reward. The inspiration of faith
vindicated itself, and the noble self-devotion that had plunged into this otherwise
desperate enterprise, because there was no restraint to the Lord to save by many or by
few, led thus to a triumph more speedy and more complete than even Jonathan could
have ventured to dream of. None of the judges had wrought a more complete or
satisfactory deliverance; and even the crossing of the Red Sea under Moses had not
afforded a more glorious evidence than this achievement of Jonathan’s of the power of
faith, or given more ample testimony to that principle of the kingdom of God which our
Lord afterwards enunciated, ‘If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say
unto this mountain, Remove hence unto yonder place; and it shall remove; and nothing
shall be impossible unto you.’ . . .
When an individual heart is moved by a strong convictio n of duty, it may be that God
means through that one man’s conviction to move the world. . .Learn, my friends, every
one, from this, never to be faithless to any conviction given to you, though, as far as
you know, it is given to you alone. Make very sure that it comes from the God of truth.
But don’t stifle it, under the notion that you are too weak to bring anything out of it.
Don’t reason that if it were really from God, it would be given to others too. Test it in
every way you can, to determine whether it be right. And if it stands these tests,
manfully give effect to it, for it may bear seed that will spread over the globe.”
Deffinbaugh: “It seems that Saul’s image suffers greatly, ever since his impressive
defeat of the Ammonites at Jabesh-gilead in chapter 11. Saul has been humiliated by the
Philistines, not only by their occupation of Israel, but by the way they capitalize on their
iron age technology (13:19-23). Much of Saul’s embarrassment is the direct result of
Jonathan’s initiative in attacking the Philistines. Now that he sees the Philistines
suffering defeat at the hand of the Israelites, Saul determines to make them pay for his
humiliation. His fight with the Philistines becomes personal. It is not God’s battle, or
even Israel’s battle; it is his battle and his victory. And so Saul puts his men under an
oath: no one is to eat until evening. The men are to fight on an empty stomach. Saul
appears to reason that this will avoid wasting valuable time (and daylight?) by stopping
to prepare and then eat a meal. (Since Saul has not really planned this battle, neither he
nor his men are really prepared for the day’s events.) There are no ready rations for the
men to eat on the run, or so it appears to Saul. So he forbids his men to eat all day long
and to fight the entire day without nourishment.
Saul is wrong on two counts. First, he is wrong in thinking his order will produce a
greater victory for the Israelites over the Philistines. It seems to Saul that his orders will
result in more time in pursuit during the precious daylight hours, and thus more
Philistines will be killed. It doesn’t work out that way. As the Philistines seek to retreat
toward their own land, the battle spreads eastward, first to Beth-aven (14:23) and then
to Aijalon (14:31). The Israelites pursue the Philistines over 20 miles of mountainous
territory, and this without food. The Israelites become weary and weak with hunger and
are not able to pursue their enemies as vigorously as they might if properly nourished.
Saul is wrong on yet a second account. He is wrong to suppose that the only way for the
Israelite warriors to be fed is by means of a ‘home-cooked meal, ’ which will take a long
time. After all, this is not the day of ‘fast food,’ and Saul does not think there is any
hope of obtaining a quick boost of energy. He is wrong. God has the “fastest” food
available. He has strategically placed a flow of honey in the forest, and it takes no time
at all to eat this honey. The soldiers, like Jonathan, only need to thrust their staff in the
midst of the honey, take it out and place it in their mouths. There is no faster or finer
food around. This is the finest, most natural nutrition for which anyone could hope. It
makes ‘Gatorade’ look pathetic.”
Guzik: “It has taken a long time for Saul, the leader of Israel, to start leading. Now he is
following God and Jonathan into battle.
i. Why was Saul just sitting . . . under a pomegranate tree when Jonathan was boldly
trusting God for the victory? Probably Saul’s insecurity had made him so afraid to fail
that he didn’t want to do anything. Now he will only go into battle because it seems like
a ‘sure thing.’ We are far from a bold trust in God when we will only do what seems to
be a “sure thing.” Go out and do something bold. If you fail, and God wasn’t really with
it the way you thought He would be, then you still have tried. The armchair
quarterbacks and back seat drivers have nothing to say to you!
ii. These were the hold-backs, who were out there to fight the Philistines, but didn’t
enter the battle until the odds were in their favor. Better to come out then than never,
but how much better to have the bold trust of a Jonathan! ”
Renwick: “Saul was brave and a great military leader. Hence, in spite of his failings,
his people clung to him; even Samuel and David, who suffered through him, had pity
and sympathy for him. We have here a brief summary of Saul’s conquests and family
matters.”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 15:1-35
BIG IDEA:
INCOMPLETE OBEDIENCE = COMPLETE REBELLION
PARTIAL OBEDIENCE = TOTAL REBELLION
Roe: In examining this command to "exterminate" the Amalekites you may ask why? It
is because the flesh is something like cancer cells in the body. When a doctor operates,
he attempts to get every single one. To leave even one in your body could bring you
back for another operation. Like cancer cells, the flesh must be continually cut out of
our lives to prevent its recurrence. The flesh is incurably evil, incurably malicious. The
word used to describe it sometimes is "pernicious." [i.e., Webster, "destructive; having
the power of killing, destroying, ruining or injuring; fatal; deadly]. It is also incurably
deceitful. It does not broadcast, "Destroyer." Instead it appears enticing and noble.
Ryrie: “The Kenites = Nomadic Midianites who were well disposed toward Israel from
ancient times (Exod. 2:16-18; 18:9-12; Num. 10:29-32; Judg. 1:16).”
D. (:7-9) Executing the Plan – Victory Coupled with Failure to Obey Fully
- sparing Agag – probably a prideful trophy of victory
- sparing what was good of the animals – probably motivated by greed and self-
will; what would be the point of wasting such valuable resources??
Blaikie : “Facts are stubborn things, and they make quick work of sophistry.”
Probably hypocrisy on Saul’s part since the motive was more one of greed than piety
(Blaikie).
Roe: Notice again how beautifully the flesh rationalizes, how it never accepts
responsibility for its actions. Saul says, "I carried out the command of the Lord, but
they spared the best." Typically the flesh will obey God as long as it does not cost
anything. The people didn't mind killing the men, women, children, infants and
worthless of the flocks, but when it came to the best of the flocks what happened? This
is when the flesh will never obey God. When it really costs what you want, then the
flesh springs into action. That is exactly what you see here.
F. (:16-19) Perspective of the Lord – Review of the Clear Command and the Obvious
Failure
1. (:16) Prophetic Communication of the Lord’s Perspective
“Wait, and let me tell you what the Lord said to me last night”
Davis: “The shift in pronouns (from ‘I’ to ‘They’) is an obvious example of the ancient
(and modern) art of ‘passing the buck.’ Saul attempted to justify the deeds of the
people on the grounds that their intentions were good. In other words, the end had fully
justified the means. He assumed that any sacrifice, whether prepared in disobedience or
obedience, would be acceptable to God. How far he had missed the point!”
Young: “Rebellion . . . witchcraft. Both are forms of apostasy, the one being denial of
God’s authority, the other a recognition of supernatural powers distinct from God.”
Davis: “One wonders how genuine this confession really was (cf. the words of Pharoah,
Exod 9:27).”
Gordon: “Saul grasps his robe in a desperate act of supplication that becomes an
unintentional acted parable.”
c. (:28) Kingdom Power Being Transferred to Another
Ryrie: Re title here of “the Glory of Israel. A unique designation for God, emphasizing
His eternal nature. The title is particularly appropriate in this context, which stresses
His immutability.”
Roe: “Here is a helpless man, probably in chains, whom Samuel chops up into little
pieces while doing the will of God. That should give us some idea that our attitude
toward the flesh should be utterly ruthless and without mercy. ”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Why are we surprised by (or What surprises us about) the severity of the Lord’s
judgment (discipline) upon Saul as it relates to his specific offense? How seriously do
we treat rebellion?
2) Trace the theme throughout the Scriptures of “to obey is better than sacrifice.”
How is this topic treated in other Bible passages? What are some practical illustrations
in your life of this important principle?
3) In what sense can God really “regret ” (vs. 11, 35) that He has done something as
part of His sovereign plan?
4) How can we justify the type of violence and bloodshed we see in passages like this?
How can the Lord command the killing of women and children and even animals and
the violent hacking into pieces of any human being (e.g. Agag), no matter the severity
of their transgressions?
**********
Davis: “The ‘repentance’ of God should not be regarded as remorse because of an error
in judgment, but deep sorrow in the light of man’s failure in spite of divine provision
(cf. Gen. 6:6). God’s laws and decrees do not change (cf. 15:29); but as men change,
different laws operate.”
Young: “In the language of the OT, God is said to ‘repent’ when a change in the
character and conduct of those with whom he is dealing leads to a corresponding
change in his plans and purposes toward them. His repentance is not to be understood
as his regretting his action, nor is it a sign of changeableness. His promises and threats
are often conditional (Jer. 18:8-10).”
Davis: “Saul had all the qualities of greatness, but his independent spirit and pride had
stripped him of the glory that could have been his. His early career was characterized
by initiative and aggressiveness which resulted in victories (cf. 11:7), but this later
degenerated into mere personal ambition (20:31). What was originally outstanding
bravery (13:3) turned into a form of recklessness (14:24).”
Blaikie : “Throughout the whole of this chapter, God appears in that more stern and
rigorous aspect of His character which is not agreeable to the natural heart of man.
Judgment, we are told, is His strange work; it is not what He delights in; but it is a work
which He cannot fail to perform when the necessity for it arises. . . That God will
execute wrath on the impenitent and unbelieving is just as much a feature of the Gospel
as that He will bestow all the blessings of salvation and eternal life on them that
believe.
But obedience, being the exact opposite, in all these things enthrones and honors God.
And therefore God has pleasure in obedience.
TEXT: 1 Samuel 16: 1-23
BIG IDEA:
LEADERSHIP TRANSITION REQUIRES CAREFUL PREPARATION
Blaikie : “it was an act of concealment, but it does not follow that it was an act of
duplicity. ”
E. (:12-13) Pull the Trigger When the Lord Gives the Go Ahead
- Impressive natural qualities and talents
- Clear choice of the Lord
- Private anointing ceremony in the context of Jesse’s family
- Empowered by the Spirit of the Lord
“the Spirit of the Lord came mightily upon David from that day forward”
- Samuel’s job was done
“And Samuel arose and went to Ramah”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) What Christian leadership transitions have you been a part of? What went well?
What did not go so smoothy and Why? What principles from this passage could have
been applied in that situation?
3) How can we be extra careful in recognizing spiritual leaders in the church since we
know that our tendency is to be over- impressed with externals while God looks at the
heart?
4) Are we preparing ourselves for opportunities God might have for us in the future by
working on character development and taking whatever steps of preparation that are
suitable for the development of our gifts and abilities?
**********
Deffinbaugh: “The anointing of David results in a test for all Israelites. David’s
anointing, unlike Saul’s, is semi-public. His father and brothers, as well as the
prominent men of the city who attend the sacrificial feast have to know that the new
king who will replace Saul is being designated. As men realize that David is the next
king, their response to him is indicative of their relation to the King of Israel and His
kingdom. It also determines their place in David’s kingdom.”
Deffinbaugh: “This may be an appropriate place to say a word about music and its
relationship to the spiritual realm. You will recall from 1 Samuel 10 (verses 5-6, 10-13)
that the prophets whom Saul met, and whom Saul joined as “one of the prophets” (at
least momentarily) as the Spirit came mightily upon him, were accompanied musically
by stringed instruments -- the tambourine, flute and harp (verse 5). Somehow the
Spirit’s coming upon Saul (and the rest, perhaps) is associated with or even initiated by
music. In chapter 16, Saul’s demonic fits are calmed by David’s playing of the harp.
Once again in 2 Kings 2:14-15, Elisha calls for a minstrel so that he can prophesy in the
Spirit. I take it that music plays some kind of role in connecting with (or disconnecting
from) the spiritual realm. I take it that we should be very careful about the kind of
music to which we submit ourselves. I know there has been a lot of talk about “rock
music,” and I am not inclined to wax eloquent on this matter here, but I do suggest that
there is a potentially beneficial type of music, and very likely, a kind of music that may
invoke the wrong spirit. This text should give us pause for thought on the subject of the
music to which we listen and its influence upon us.”
Dave Martin:
PREPARATION:
God’s Training Ground for Success…
· Success occurs when opportunity meets preparation. - Zig Ziglar
· The price of mastery in any field is through preparation – God’s training grounds.
1. SOLITUDE
· David shepherd sheep in lonely places. Gently leading and caring for them. Quiet and
all alone.
· “Sound of silence” – Getting all alone with God, away from everyday hustle & bustle
distractions.
· God does not speak to us in earthquakes, wind or fire but in a quiet whisper. 1Kings
19:12
· Your private life all alone with the Lord is where the action of preparation takes place.
2. OBSCURITY
· Success is how high you bounce when you hit bottom. - Gen. George Patton
· David labored unseen, unknown and unappreciated. A nobody tha t God saw!
· David was faithful in serving out-of-sight in the backfields of Bethlehem.
· Some in this church are faithfully laboring in obscurity, unseen deeds you do, are
being noticed by the Lord. Stay obedient, stay faithful you’re being prepared for the
future. (1Co. 15:58)
3. MONOTONY
· This is remaining faithful in the insignificant, mundane, routine, unexciting, dull,
boring things / life.
· David faithfully attended his sheep. He assumed the responsibility and did it well.
· The secret of success if to do the common things uncommonly well. - John D.
Rockefeller, Jr.
· It’s in the little things and the lonely places where we prove ourselves for bigger
things.
· In God’s program there is no “fast track” pill we can take – it’s being faithful in the
“little” things.
4. REALITY
1 Samuel 17:34-35 But David said to Saul, "Your servant has been keeping his father’s
sheep. When a lion or a bear came and carried off a sheep from the flock, 35I went after
it, struck it and rescued the sheep from its mouth. When it turned on me, I seized it by
its hair, struck it and killed it.
· David remained committed and responsible when nobody was looking.
· Long before he faced off with Goliath he faced reality of lions and bears attacking his
sheep.
· Everyone of us go through life’s university of time and reality in preparation for future
assignment
· This is the reality of life, God uses trials, circumstances to grow us. He will never
waste a hurt.
· If you want a place in the sun, you have to expect some blisters. - Rotator
Blaikie : “Of the influence of music in remedying disorders of the nerves there is no
want of evidence…
Still, with all its success, it was but a poor method of soothing a troubled spirit
compared to the methods that David was afterwards to employ. It dealt chiefly with
man’s physical nature, it soothed the nervous system, and removed the hindrance which
their disorder caused to the action of the powers of the mind. It did not strike at the root
of all trouble—alienation from God; it did not attempt to create and apply the only
permanent remedy for trouble—trust in a loving Father’s care. It was a mere
foreshadow, on a comparatively low and earthly ground, of the way in which David, as
the Psalmist, was afterwards to provide the true ‘oil of joy for the mourner,’ and to
become a guide to the downcast soul from the fearful pit and the miry clay up to the
third heaven of joy and peace. The sounds of his harp could only operate by an
influence felt alike by saint and sinner in soothing an agitated frame; but with the words
of his Psalms, the Divine Spirit, by whose inspiration they were poured out, was in all
coming ages to unite Himself, and to use them for showing the sin-burdened soul the
true cause of its misery, and for leading it by a holy path, sorrowing yet rejoicing, to the
home of its reconciled Father.”
Jeffries :"Saul was still legally the king, but God was preparing David for his future
responsibilities. The anointing oil poured over David’s head stood for holiness. It was
used to set people or objects apart for God’s service. Each king and high priest was
anointed with oil. This commissioned him as God’s representative to the nation.
Although God rejected Saul’s kingship by not allowing any of his descendants to sit on
Israel’s throne, Saul himself remained in his position until his death."
- Notes on 1 Samuel 16:13, The Life Application Study Bible
Terry Sisney: Greatness is not a one time event: We see David slay the giant and we
think that was when he became great, but greatness is not doing one great thing in a big
way, But in doing every little thing in a great way.
True greatness is not seen in the big things we do, but in the little things we do in a
great way.
Jeffries: "Europeans and Americans are raised with a system of thought that originated
in ancient Greece. This system addresses logic -- the kind mathematicians use to
deduce axioms in geometry, and the kind Sherlock Holmes made famous for solving
crimes. Greek logic insists that opposites contradict each other and cannot both be true.
By contrast, Hebrews believed that opposites are often both true. In the Bible we find
Jesus, the apostles, and the prophets often holding apparently conflicting ideas in
tension. In 1 Samuel 16:14 Saul’s troubles are attributed to ‘an evil spirit from the
Lord.’ If we look further, we find that in the Old Testament everything, including evil,
is commonly traced back to God ( Job 2:10, Isaiah 45:7, Amos 3:6 ), who is in some
sense responsible for it or the cause of it. At the same time, the Scriptures affirm the
absolute holiness of God and never imply that evil has its ultimate origin in Him.
James 1:13-17 insists that God is not the source of temptation to do evil, but this ‘evil
spirit from the Lord’ clearly moves Saul to attempt murder.
There is some merit to trying to logically work out in what sense God is responsible for
evil such as Saul’s ‘evil spirit,’ and in what sense He is not. But it is more fruitful to
ask God for the Hebrew ability to hold apparent contradictions in tension. We need a
certain humility about our reasoning abilities. The Bible emphasizes God’s absolute
sovereignty and teaches that He is able to use even evil to achieve His own purposes,
which are always good. How God can use evil for good is something we need to see in
specific circumstances with the eyes of faith, not try to reduce to a series of logical
axioms.
It was not unjust for God to afflict Saul; He was simply following the terms of His
covenant with Israel. That covenant promised blessings, such as God’s Spirit to equip
Saul to be king ( 10:10, 11:6 ), if Saul was obedient. It promised curses, such as the
Holy Spirit’s departure and an evil spirit’s torment, for disobedience." - Wayne S.
Nelson: "Hebrew Thought" in the Life Change Commentary on 1 Samuel
TEXT: 1 Samuel 17:1-58
BIG IDEA:
DAVID'S VICTORY OVER GOLIATH PROVIDES A MODEL FOR
SUCCESSFUL SPIRITUAL WARFARE
INTRODUCTION:
In what ways are our spiritual problems and adversaries like Goliath?
1) Our problems loom large ( Goliath about 9'6") --
seem impossible to us (:4-7)
2) We often struggle daily with same problem
Goliath challenged the Israelites for 40 days (:16)
3) Struggles can taunt us: How can you be a Christian ...
"Defied God" -- to vilify someone's character, reputation,
honor; say sharp things against; taunt
(:10,23,25,26,36,43,45)
4) We can end up feeling defeated and servants of sin --
dominated by fear (:11,24)
(Note: You can be sure the enemy is prepared for battle - :1)
C. Faithful to Authority
Only fight battles that the Lord has a stake in winning; make
sure our battles are important to the Lord. Examine our priorities.
How will victory in this battle glorify our God? In what area is
Satan marshalling his forces to try to defy God and destroy God's
program? The lines between the people of God and God's enemies were
clearly drawn (:1-3)--no gray area here-- "the battle is the
Lord's" (:47)
1. Our own might and weapons (:42 outwardly, David was not
impressive when compared to Goliath; :47)
The world makes fun of the "simple" resources of the believer and would
have us trust in the wrong type of resources
A. Unwise, unbelieving counsel from the very ones that should be encouraging us
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Are we able to gain perspective on our problems (the “giants” in our life) by
comparing their impotence to the almighty power of “the armies of the living God”?
(:26)
2) If the battle truly is “the Lord’s” (:47), how can we lay aside the weapons of the
flesh and the folly of self-confidence and the despair of inadequacy and trust in the
deliverance of the Lord of hosts?
4) How can our “giants” be dealt with decisively so that they don’t keep revisiting us
daily with taunts and threats?
**********
Chestnut: Even though the story is familiar, it's worth a second look.
a. Not about underdogs, strength, or maneuverability in battle.
b. It is about how we serve a God who can take care of situations that
appear to be hopeless.
Holwick:
I. "What is the biggest giant in your life right now?"
1. Fill in blank on study outline. (don't put someone next to you)
2. It may be a problem or a person.
A) Finances, work, relationship.
B) May not be a bad thing, it's just not a good thing.
C) Some giants sit on your back, but others stand in the
way of something good - they are a barrier.
D) Have a concrete giant in view during the sermon.
Roper: Israel bad been stripped of its manhood. There was not a man among them. You
can imagine how these words of Goliath must have stung them; "You are servants of
Saul, and he's no man at all! Send me a man, any man will do, just send me a man!"
But there was not one man among them. That is what giants do to us. They take away
our sense of manhood and womanhood. We know that we were not destined to live
oppressed in this way, but we have no freedom to change. We are tyrannized, stripped
of our strength and power. That is what had happed to Israel, and it is what happens to
us. And note that the issue is: master, or be mastered. There is no middle ground. You
cannot make peace with a giant. There may be a standoff for a while, but it cannot
endure. It is either serve or be served; there can be no truce.
...
You might wonder why David chose five stones. You would think that faith would lead
him to take only one. It is inviting to assume that he did it because Goliath did have
four brothers, and David was going to take them all. I am inclined to think, however,
that David realized the giant might not fall the first time. There might have to be
repeated efforts to bring him down, but he would come down. When he marched out to
meet Goliath, David's word was, "The Lord has already delivered you into my hands."
He was certain of victory. But he knew it might take repeated attempts. Hebrews 6 tells
us it is by faith and patience that we inherit the promises. The application of faith in one
instance may not be enough, but the victory is certain. And if we continue to apply the
principles, and we are not defeated and discouraged, and we do not give up and quit but
we keep moving out in obedience against the giants in our life, God will bring those
giants down. The problem is that we are tempted to quit too soon. We sling one rock
and miss, and then give up.
Roe:
Canaan is not a picture of heaven. There will be no fights in heaven. It is a picture of
resting in God in the middle of the battles down here. The battles we are fighting are
already won. We are to fight from a position of rest, depending on God's resources and
God's schedule. Our enemies have been defeated in Christ and our job is to possess the
land by faith. The Philistines are invaders in the land.
Number two: the Philistines are to be exterminated. As long as they are around, they
will be a warlike, hostile, uncircumcised people. They had been a thorn in the side of
Israel for years because they had never been totally exterminated. The Israelites, on the
other hand, owned the land because God graciously gave it to them not because they
earned it. He marked this covenant with them by the sign of circumcision. Circumcision
was not only God's sign of the seed promise [in Genesis to Abraham] but also the sign
of the land promise. So, every Israelite male in that army standing on the cliff across the
valley from the Philistines had a mark on his body that said, "This land is mine. God
gave it to me, and I have the right to it forever." Yet there they stood, marked by God,
letting an enemy, who had no right to be there, immobilize them.
Number three: as long as Goliath held the Israelites at bay, he was a reproach and a
disgrace to them. They were the "armies of the living God," yet they were terrorized by
one uncircumcised Philistine.
If we allow the Goliaths in our lives to possess us, we are disgraced in the same way.
We need to realize that and to never make peace with them. Look at Joshua. He rid
Canaan of all the Goliaths, all the giants, except for those in the little Southwest corner
of the land. They came back to haunt him.
Number four: not only are Goliaths a reproach to us, but they also make a mockery of
the living God. If we believe our God is God of the universe, that Jesus Christ maintains
the universe by the word of his power, that he is omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent
and we do not act like he is, we make a mockery of our God.
...
God's idea was to have the Jewish nation always at a disadvantage so they would put no
trust in human resources. God does not want our will, our integrity of character or our
most valiant efforts to deal with the Goliaths, or even the little Philistines behind them,
in our lives. The battle is the Lord's. He may deal with us until we bottom out, until we
lie hopeless before him, before he brings us back. He wants to teach us that out of
death comes resurrection power. Until we have been crucified and have put to death
everything we count on outside of Jesus Christ and his indwelling life, we cannot
experience the fullness of the resurrection power of Christ. Our God is determined to
put us through afflictions, persecutions, and perplexities, so the life of Jesus Christ may
be made manifest in our mortal flesh.
TEXT: 1 Samuel 18:1-30
BIG IDEA:
PROSPERITY FLOWS OUT OF THE PRESENCE AND FAVOR OF GOD
INTRODUCTION:
In studying and applying any OT passage on prosperity, it is
helpful to learn from the material blessings how to seek God for spiritual
blessings (not that God does not provide us with material blessings as
well -- but the focus seems to be on spiritual blessings)
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) When you examine your closest friends, what is it about them that knit your soul
most closely to them? What was the initial attraction? What qualities promoted a
deeper friendship? How have you learned to be a good friend to others?
2) How are Christian ministries undermined by jealousy and envy? What is our
response to those with obvious spiritual gifts? Do we focus on what is positive or do
we look for their Achilles heel?
3) Trace the theme of the Lord “being with someone ” throughout the OT. What are the
special blessings of His presence and favor?
4) Did David marry for the right or the wrong reasons? What was Saul’s intent in
giving his daughter to David in marriage?
**********
Roper: “Both David and Jonathan were, to my thinking, swashbuckling men of faith,
go- for-broke individuals, who were willing to fling their lives away and entrust
themselves to the Lord, no matter what it might cost them. The theme of Jonathan's life
is found in his own words: "The Lord will deliver, whethe r by many or by few." That is,
‘It doesn't make any difference how many of us there are; it doesn't make any difference
how many of our opponents may exist. The Lord will deliver.’ That was the keynote of
his life.
David likewise felt this way. As David was explaining to Saul his victory over the
giant, Jonathan's heart was knit to the heart of David, and he made a covenant with him.
This is where friendships usually start, with some sort of attraction like this. People
think the way we think, like the things we like, are interested in things as we are
interested in them, and we note that they have the same perspective as we. This is not
necessarily wrong We have to remember that even the Lord chose twelve men. And
Mark says he chose them on this basis: he chose those whom he would. He was drawn
to these men, he liked them, he felt a natural attraction.
Davis: “There were, therefore, two fundamental reasons for Saul’s deep jealousy
regarding David ’s success. The first was the fact that David had captivated the
imagination of the Israelites throughout the land, and had risen so rapidly in popularity.
The folk song was quite clearly a thorn in Saul’s side (v. 8). The other reason for Saul’s
jealousy is detected in verse 12, and that was Saul’s great fear of David. It was quite
evident to Saul that David was, indeed, especially blessed of God, and at the same time
he was probably cognizant of the fact that the Spirit of God had departed from him, thus
leaving him without the skills and abilities necessary for successful rulership.”
Blaikie : Re purpose of trials in the life of David as preparation for the throne –
“In the case of David, God’s purpose manifestly was to exercise and strengthen such
qualities as trust in God, prayerfulness, self-command, serenity of temper, consideration
for others, and the hope of a happy issue out of all his troubles. His trials were indeed
both numerous and various. The cup of honour dashed from his lips when he had just
begun to taste it; promises the most solemn deliberately violated, and rewards of
perilous service coolly withheld from him; faithful services turned into occasions of
cruel persecution; enforced separation from beloved friends; laceration of feelings from
Saul’s cruel and bloody treatment of some who had befriended him; calumnious
charges persisted in after convincing and generous refutation; ungrateful treatment from
those he had benefited, like Nabal; treachery from those he had delivered, like the men
of Keilah; perfidy on the part of some he had trusted, like Cush; assassination
threatened by some of his own followers, as at Ziklag, -- these and many other trials
were the hard and bitter discipline which David had to undergo in the wilderness.”
Deffinbaugh:
(:1-5) David has a “nice day”
(:6-9) The Musicians Produce a Sour Note, and the Dancers Step on Saul’s Toes
(:10-12) Murder by a Maniac … Or … Why can’t David get the Point
(:13-30) Kill ‘Em With Kindness or Murder in the Military
...
God is bringing to pass the things He has purposed and promised. In chapters 13 and
15, God indicates to Saul that his kingdom will end. In our text, we watch his reign
unravel. Saul continues to lose a grip on his own life and on his kingdom. David is
anointed as the new king of Israel in chapter 16, and we see how God prepares the way
for David’s reign. David has very close links with Saul and his palace. Now, he is
closely associated with two more members of Saul’s royal family, his son (now a close
friend) and his daughter (now David’s wife). David now has authority in Saul’s army,
and through experience, shows himself to be a brave man and a great leader. David is
on his way up, and Saul is on his way down. It is not the way we expected this to
happen, but then God’s plans seldom come about in ways we expect (see Isaiah 55:8-
11; Romans 11:33-36; 1 Corinthians 2:6-16).
TEXT: 1 Samuel 19: 1-24
TITLE: UNTOUCHABLE!
BIG IDEA:
GOD CAN USE OUR NETWORK OF CLOSE RELATIONSHIPS TO HELP
PROTECT US IN TIMES OF DANGER AND PERSECUTION
B. Imminent Danger
C. Complication: Threat coming from the very one David was called to served
Aspects of authority and submission involved as well as self preservation
Rom. 8:38-39 “For I am convinced that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor
principalities, nor things present, nor things to come, nor powers, nor height, nor
depth, nor any other created thing shall be able to separate us from the love of God
which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.”
Seeking information and clarification – are things really as bad as they seem? Can a
peaceable solution for forged?
C. (:4-7) Friendship Involves Speaking Up on One Another’s Behalf
Reinforce their positive characteristics and contributions.
- “he has not sinned against you”
- “his deeds have been very beneficial to you”
B. Plans to Capture David are Repeatedly Frustrated / The Supreme Power of the Spirit
of God
Saul was persistent in his efforts to seek out David to capture and kill him.
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Imagine the breadth of the net which Saul was seeking to cast around David. He
involved his servants, his army, even his close family members like Jonathan who had
such an affinity with David. How frustrating was it for Saul to not be able to touch
David?
2) How does the hardening of Saul’s heart compare with that of Pharoah at the time of
the Exodus, or with the general account of the increasing cycles of depravity from
Romans 1?
3) How was Jonathan able to remain loyal to his friend and yet respectful to his father,
the king? Why did Jonathan continue to give his father the benefit of the doubt … even
though he had proved time and again that his word could not be trusted? Was this a
good thing or a bad thing on Jonathan’s part?
4) What type of humiliation awaits those proud antagonists of the Lord who refuse to
bow the knee in submission to His will?
**********
Deffinbaugh: “As we leave this rescue by Michal, we should not overlook Psalm 59,
which is David’s reflection on his deliverance here. While we dare not attempt to deal
with this psalm in detail, a couple of observations can be made. First, you will notice
that Michal is never mentioned in the psalm. It is not that she is somehow being
snubbed by David, as though she did not take part in the rescue. David is not looking at
the immediate cause of his deliverance in this psalm, but the ultimate cause – God.
Thus, David praises God for saving his life. Second, the description of David’s pursuers
makes it sound as though they are Gentiles, rather than Jews (see Psalm 59:5-8). I
would not be surprised if the men Saul sent to capture David were Gentiles. We know
that Saul hired mercenaries (see 1 Samuel 14:52). Such men have no reservations in
helping put David to death, where Israelites might. How fitting too that Saul (a Jew)
would utilize such mercenaries (Gentiles) to oppose God’s king, just as the Jewish
religious leaders later do in opposing Christ. Finally, David speaks of these men who
seek his capture as liars (Psalm 59:12). Were these men some of those who falsely
accuse David before Saul (see 1 Samuel 24:9; 26:19)?”
Gordon: “Whereas one of the signs confirming Saul’s election as king had been his
participation in an ecstatic display by a band of prophets (10:5-13), his subjection to the
same mysterious power in this section serves only to confirm his rejection by Yahweh.
As the spirit of Yahweh neutralizes Saul’s attempts to apprehend David, it transpires
that the latter enjoys a sacrosanctity which Yahweh himself is underwriting.”
Blaikie : “Can we think of a more desolate condition than that in which he found himself
after his wife let him down through a window? It is night, and he is alone. Who could
be unmoved when placed in such a position? Forced to fly from his home and his
young wife, just after he had begun to know their sweets, and no prospect of a happy
return! Driven forth by the murderous fury of the king whom he had served with a
loyalty and a devotion that could not have been surpassed! His home desolated and his
life threatened by the father of his wife, the man whom even nature should have
inspired with a kindly interest in his welfare! What good had it done him that he had
slain that giant? What return had he got for his service in ever so often soothing the
nerves of the irritable monarch with the gentle warblings of his harp? What good had
come of all his perilous exploits against the Philistines, of the hundred foreskins of the
king’s enemies, of the last great victory which had brought so unprecedented advantage
to Israel? Would it not have been better for him never to have touched a weapon, never
to have encountered a foe, but kept feeding that flock of his father’s and caring for
those irrational creatures, who had always returned his kindness with gratitude, and
been far more like friends and companions than that terrible Saul? Such thoughts might
perhaps hover about his bosom, but certainly they would receive no entertainment from
him. They might knock at his door, but they would not be admitted. A man like David
could never seriously regret that he had done his duty. He could never seriously wish
that he had never responded to the call of God and of his country. But he might well
feel how empty and unprofitable even the most successful worldly career may become,
how maddening the changes of fortune, how intolerable the unjust retributions of men
in power. His ill- treatment was so atrocious that, had he not had a refuge in God, it
might have driven him to madness or to suicide. It drove him to the throne of grace,
where he found grace to help him in his time of need.”
Keil and Delitzsch: “Saul and his messengers, the zealous performers of his will, ought
no doubt to have learned, from what happened to them in the presence of the prophets,
that God had the hearts of men in His power, and guided them at His will … Saul was
seized by this mighty influence of the Spirit of God in a more powerful manner than his
servants were, both because he had most obstinately resisted the leadings of divine
grace, and also in order that, if it were possible, his hard heart might be broken and
subdued by the power of grace. If, however, he should nevertheless continue
obstinately in his rebellion against God, he would then fall under the judgment of
hardening, which would be speedily followed by his destruction. ”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 20:1-31
BIG IDEA:
DAVID AND JONATHAN -- A MODEL OF TRUE FRIENDSHIP
INTRODUCTION:
Prov. 18:24 “a friend who sticks closer than a brother”
Blaikie : “At the foundation of all friendship lies congeniality of heart – a kindred
feeling of which one often becomes conscious by instinct at first sight. But there must
also be elements of difference in friends. It s a great point to have a friend who is above
us in some things, and who will thus be likely to draw us up to a higher level of
character, instead of dragging us down to a lower. And a friend is very useful, if he is
rich in qualities where we are poor.”
II. True Friendship Is Based on God-Given Love (fruit of the Holy Spirit)
IV. Willing to Do Anything for One Another -- Even to the Point of Death
(20:4-7)
“Whatever you say, I will do for you.”
Quite an open check invitation
IX. Shares the Full Range of the Emotional Spectrum and Especially Grieves
At the Necessity of Separation
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) What expectations did David have of Jonathan and vice versa in this friendship?
What demands did they make upon each other? Do our friends come through for us
when the chips are down? In what ways have our friends let us down?
2) How could Jonathan be so free of envy and jealousy and a spirit of competition?
What a unique friendship – where one party is going to be granted what on natural
grounds would seem to be the rights and privileges and honor and power of the other!
3) Remember that Jonathan was David ’s brother- in- law as well as his friend. How
difficult was it for them to have to separate? How have we coped with life changes that
have separated us from our friends?
4) How does the language used by Saul and his actions towards his own son Jonathan
reflect the depths of his depravity and the hardening of his heart? Are we shocked at
the expression of sin among intimate family members?
**********
Roper: There is a word which occurs very frequently in conjunction with the covenant.
It is translated in various ways - sometimes as "mercy", sometimes as "loving-
kindness". But the word basically means "loyalty". It indicates that God not only gives
his word but that he is faithful to it. He covenants with his people that he will produce
In our lives all of his will, and then he is loyal to us. He fulfills that promise. He follows
through. The interesting thing is that David uses both of these terms in this
statement to Jonathan. "Therefore," he says, "deal loyally with me, because the
covenant you have with me is a covenant of the Lord."
This adds another dimension to friendship. Friendship is not just giving of myself to
another person, but it is giving for a particular purpose - that the person might be
everything God intends him or her to be. God has a plan for your life, and he is going to
fulfill that plan. He is loyal to you to accomplish that plan. And he uses me in your life,
and he uses you in my life, to accomplish that plan. Therefore the fact that you are a
friend tells me that I not only must give of myself to you, that I am to give of myself to
the end that you might be everything God intends you to be. That was the covenant
David and Jonathan experienced.
...
Their friendship had progressed to the point that the one thing the y held in common
which was most precious to both was their relationship to the Lord. Jonathan lived that
David might realize God's best in his life. David lived that Jonathan might realize God's
best in his life. There was this mutual friendship which existed because each wanted
God's will to be fulfilled in the other's life. That is what friendship is. You see, if we
rightly understand friendship, we will never be without friends. We can never say, "I
have no friends," because there are friends on every hand whose life we can share.
Deffinbaugh: “Now Saul is really mad. He picks up his spear, always nearby, and hurls
it at his own son Jonathan. Saul hurls his spear, and Jonathan gets the point. He is not
hit. Fortunately Saul has gotten no better at hitting his target with a spear. There is no
longer any doubt in Jonathan’s mind. Now there are two empty places at that table,
David’s and Jonathan’s. How appropriate. Jonathan is deeply grieved. His grief, you
will note, is not due to the humiliation his father has heaped upon him at the dinner
table, but due to the way his father has dishonored David (verse 34). David has been
right all along, dead right. Saul does intend to kill him, and he will also kill anyone who
tries to stop him from doing so.
...
We can see that this chapter is a significant turning point in terms of David’s
relationship with Saul and with Jonathan. Previously, David has fled from Saul’s
presence, but this has always been temporary. Now, it is permanent. David will never
again sit at Saul’s table, never again play his harp to soothe the king’s troubled spirit,
never again fight for Saul in the Israelite army. David will become a fugitive who is
constantly on the run from Saul who seeks to kill him. Because of this, the fellowship
David has been able to enjoy with Jonathan will never be the same either. And so David
and Jonathan say their sad farewells in our text. They will meet again, but it will not be
often, or for long.”
Blaikie : “Jonathan and he were doomed, after the briefest period of companionship, to a
lifelong separation, and the friendship which had seemed to promise a perpetual solace
of his trials, only aggravated their severity, when its joys were violently reft away. ”
Ryrie: Re hesed – “Love and loyalty, the two essential aspects of a covenant
relationship, are bound together in this word. Jonathan recognized that David would
one day be king and requested protection for himself and his family when David would
take the throne.”
Young: Re vs. 22 “for the Lord has sent you away” –
“When Jacob’s sons sent their younger brother to Egypt, God was in the plans for
Joseph’s life. So now God was sending David away to prepare him in the tough
discipline of life for the leadership of Israel.”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 21:1-15
BIG IDEA:
WHEN WE LOSE FOCUS ON GOD’S POWER TO PROTECT US WE
RESORT TO DESPERATE MEASURES TO SAVE OUR OWN SKIN
WITHOUT REGARD TO:
- THE IMAPCT ON THE WELL BEING OF OTHERS
- THE IMPACT ON OUR TESTIMONY FOR THE LORD
INTRODUCTION:
Sad chapter in the history of God’s Anointed;
Most places we see David portrayed in a very noble light
Roe: “How does it look to Ahimelech? Here is the leader of the armies of Saul, and he
is alone. It is a Sabbath. The ‘Law’ forbids travel on the Sabbath. David never traveled
alone. He traveled with an army, or at least a band of bodyguards. Ahimelech, knowing
the kind of conflict going on 5 miles north, is sure to wonder what is happening. David,
knowing Ahimelech probably understands the conflict in the palace and fearful that
Ahimelech will not provide his needs, lies to him.”
Roe: This was the "bread of the Presence," the twelve loaves that were baked every
week on the Sabbath, brought into the tabernacle, into the Holy Place, laid on the table,
six loaves in each portion, each loaf representing a tribe of Israel. Each loaf was
dedicated to God. They sat there the full seven days, and were sanctified to God. They
indicated God was the total provider for all the needs of Israel. At the end of seven
days, 12 fresh loaves were brought in to replace the twelve loaves on the table. The high
priest, and the priests of the nation of Israel, could eat those loaves which were
replaced. They were set apart for the use of the priests but could be eaten only in the
Holy Place. So all Ahimelech had was consecrated bread, bread that had come right off
the table of the Lord.
Roe: Why does God give David a view of Doeg the Edomite, the compromiser, the
fellow who lives by his wits, by his deceit, by expediency, chief of Saul's shepherds,
"big man on campus" back at Gibeah of Saul? Why right here? David knows Doeg will
go back and tell Saul. What position did David put Ahimelech in? Saul is a mad man,
remember. He is going to keep the reins of government no matter what YHWH wants,
and should YHWH's anointed king, David, get in his way, David dies. Saul is about to
embark upon a campaign that destroys Israel in order to destroy David, and David
knows that. What do you think goes through David's mind about the chances of
Ahimelech coming out of this unscathed? He is assuredly going to get hurt. How much
does David care about that? David has now focused totally on himself, "Nobody has it
as bad as I do. These are legitimate needs." God deliberately, at this point in time when
David first starts his deceit, brings him Doeg, and he has a chance, therefore, to come
clean so the right report gets back to Saul. [David admits later on that he knew Doeg
would go and tell Saul.] But what does he do? Well, he is too focused on self
and cares little about Ahimelech. When you are focused on self, you do not care about
anybody else. It is just "My needs. My problems."
Ryrie: “Doeg was detained at the sanctuary at Nob because of a vow, a need for
cleansing, or because he was suspected of leprosy (Lev. 13:4).”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) How should David have attempted to feed and equip himself and his men without
engaging in deceit? What would a walk of faith have looked like in this predicament?
Do we ever feel boxed in as if obedience is not even an option?
2) Re vs. 7 – How is “bad luck” (Doeg just happening to be there that day so that he
would recognize David and rat him out) really encompassed within God’s overall plan
and providence? Why do bad things happen to good people – like Ahimelech and his
priests who were innocently going about their daily responsibilities?
3) What type of leadership qualities are being developed during this wacky time of
being on the run and under constant pressure?
4) How does David apply his ingenuity to help escape from his quandary? Why don’t
we see David calling upon the Lord throughout this episode?
**********
Roe: The wilderness experiences in our lives are deliberately designed by God to form
us into men or women of maturity. As C. S. Lewis says, "God whispers to us in our
pleasures, but he shouts to us in our pain." Pain is God's megaphone to get our
attention. So our struggles and stresses, which can be emotional, physical or spiritual,
are God's way of telling us, "I'm going to make you into a man after my own heart.
Don't fight it. Just allow me to mold you and shape you into the image of Christ."
So we will see David have experiences and attitudes that we have. We will see him
angry with God, obeying God, making it big, plunging to the depths. We will see all the
peaks and valleys that a normal person experiences. This is God's man we are watching,
a "man after his own heart." It is a comforting thing.
Ryrie: “The priest recognized that his moral obligation to preserve David’s life by
providing bread superceded the ceremonial regulation concerning who could eat the
showbread (Lev. 24:5-9). Christ referred to this example when teaching the true
meaning of the Sabbath law. ”
Blaikie : “Time after time, he follows that policy of deceit which he had instructed
Jonathan to pursue in explaining his absence from the feast in Saul’s house. It is
painful in the last degree to see one whose faith towered to such a lofty height in the
encounter with Goliath, coming down from that noble elevation, to find him resorting
for self-protection to the lies and artifices of an imposter…
It was God’s purpose now to allow David to feel his own weakness; he was to pass
through that terrible ordeal when, tossed on a sea of trials, one feels like Noah’s dove,
unable to find rest for the sole of one ’s foot, and seems on the very eve of dropping
helpless into the billows, till the ark presents itself, and a gracious hand is put forth to
the rescue. Left to himself, tempted to make use of carnal expedients, and taught the
wretchedness of such expedients; learning also, through this discipline, to anchor his
soul more firmly on the promise of the living God, David was now undergoing a most
essential part of his early training, gaining the experience that was to qualify him to say
with such earnestness to others, ‘O taste and see that the Lord is good: blessed is the
man that trusted in Him.’”
Deffinbaugh: Achish is forced to think through his offer to give David sanctuary in
Gath. While he is thinking about this, David is thinking too. He has heard of the counsel
the king’s servants gave to Achish. He knows that if their advice is taken, he might be
put to death. He is in trouble, a lot of trouble. How can David get out of this
predicament with his life?
It turns out there is a way. David does escape with his life, but not with his dignity. If he
arrives as a dreaded warrior, greater even than Goliath, he leaves as a lunatic. David
somehow lands on the idea of acting insane. If he can convince the king that he has lost
his sanity, he will no longer be taken seriously, and he might even be allowed to live.
So David begins to carry out his plan. He scribbles on the doors of the city gate and lets
the saliva run down his face and in his beard. He is disgusting and pathetic.
If his act convinces no one else, it convinces the king. Achish really does not want to
kill David anyway. He seems to genuinely like him. This is his way out. The king needs
not take a madman seriously! There is no glory in killing David. There is no benefit to
keeping him in Gath. Gath is not a mental asylum! They have enough crazy Philistines
in town; they do not need an Israelite madman as well. And so Achish has David run
out of town. David’s life is spared, and the concerns of the advisors of the king are dealt
with. This, so it seems, is a win-win situation.
TEXT: 1 Samuel 22:1-23
BIG IDEA:
GOD’S APPOINTED LEADER MAKES ALL NECESSARY PREPARATIONS
TO MOBILIZE AND FULFILL HIS CALLING IN RESPONSE TO GOD’S
LEADING (AND TIMING)
TRANSITION:
David once again inquiring of the Lord (20:10; 23:2)
What should I do to fulfill my calling – given my high level of responsibility
(and When should I do it?)
Roe: “The cave of Adullam is about 10 miles back toward Bethlehem up the Valley of
Elah which is pock- marked with caves. It is an ideal hiding place and is very close to
the border of the Philistines, where David can again flee if he has to get across the
border in a hurry. It is also reasonably close to Bethlehem, his home town. So, from his
perspective, he is pretty centrally located.”
Davis: “The Moabites probably viewed David as an enemy of Saul, and therefore were
willing to care for his parents, perhaps in exchange for a favor on his part.”
C. Appealing to those who had been similarly disenfranchised – “the down and outers”
An unpromising band of recruits – giving them a second chance at success –
The D Squad:
- “everyone who was in Distress”
- “everyone who was in Debt”
- “everyone who was Discontented”
D. Asserting His Leadership
“became captain over them” (400 men)
B. (:11-19) Saul Executing Ahimelech (along with his priests and city) for Helping
David (instead of betraying him to Saul)
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Why did God send the prophet Gad to instruct David to relocate from relative safety
in the cave of Adullam to the more precarious location in Judah? How did David
respond to this guidance?
2) How did Saul’s servants respond to him – to his charges of conspiracy and to his
outrageous command to kill all the priests? Do you think popular opinion was turning
against Saul as he ordered this bizarre massacre? What did the general public think of
this massive hunt to find and kill David and his men?
3) Why did Doeg the Edomite respond differently? What was he hoping to gain? How
do you think his actions affected him?
4) It appears as if David had some insight into the consequence of his duplicity way
back at the time Doeg was hanging around the camp. How could he live with himself
in the future knowing that his actions had caused the loss of so much innocent life?
How could he be so bold as to promise Abiathar safety?
**********
QUOTES FOR REFLECTION:
Davis: “The presence of Abiathar with David must have been of considerable comfort
at this time, for now he had the ephod and the Urim and the Thummim (23:6). In spite
of the destruction and devastation at Nob, God had made provision for David. This,
indeed, was an act of mercy and grace. Abiathar remained with David for a long period
of time, and after David ’s time as an outlaw was appointed high priest. He held the
office until Solomon banished him for his share in Adonijah’s attempt at seizing the
throne (1 Kings 2:26ff.).”
Blaikie : “There is one thing in David, when he received the information, that we cannot
but admire – his readiness to take to himself his full share of blame … Nor did he
excuse himself on the ground that the massacre was the fulfillment of the longstanding
sentence on Eli’s house. He knew well that that circumstance in no degree lessened his
own guilt, or the guilt of Doeg and Saul. Though God may use men’s wicked passions
to bring about His purposes, that in no degree lessens the guilt of these passions.”
Roe: How will David ever learn to trust God with all his heart, to be a man after God's
own heart, if he is safe in his stronghold at Adullam where his safety is tied to a
physical relationship of hiding in a cave with his 400 men instead of a spiritual one of
simply trusting God in time of danger? So, God deliberately sends him back into Judah
where there is risk. The Christian life is a life of risk taking. It is called "faith." Faith is
when you step out and act like you believe that what God says is true, even when you
do not see how it is ever going to work out. So, David is called to go back into Judah
and become a man of faith. …
God's apparent "extravagance" with the lives of believers is classically illustrated in the
martyrdom of the early Christians. They, together with their families, were thrown into
arenas as food for lions. They were put on stakes, covered with tar and lit as torches for
banquets. Actually the word "martyr" in the Greek simply means "witness." But
because in those days so many times witnessing cost you your life, the term became
consistently used as a witness by death. "Martyr" today means to die for your witness.
Those early Christians died by the hundreds and God could have stopped that, but he
did not. But, again, take your eyes off this life a moment and think, "Where did those
believers go when they died and with Whom were they after death?" Additionally, early
accounts show that numbers of pagans became Christians by watching the way
Christians died. Again, if God chooses to evangelize the lost in this manner, it is His
right. "The blood of martyrs is the seed of the Church."
Deffinbaugh: “But the conspiracy theory goes even further. Not only does Saul accuse
Jonathan and David of conspiring against him, he also accuses his servants – all of
them! Saul is surrounded by his servants as he sits under the tamarisk tree near his
home in Gibeah (verse 6). He begins by reminding his servants about the nature of
politics and the spoils of political victory and power. As a reward for their loyalty to
Saul, these Benjamites have been given property and positions of authority as political
spoils. Do they think that if David becomes king they will enjoy the same spoils? They
most certainly will not. And so Saul reminds his servants that they owe him -- big time.
And now he wants a payback -- by having them inform him of David’s whereabouts.
Saul tells his servants that by keeping silent about David and withholding any
information about him and his whereabouts, they are joining David in his conspiracy
against Saul. Doeg the Edomite finds this ample reason to pass on to Saul what he
observed while at Nob.”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 23:1-29
BIG IDEA:
GOD SPECIALIZES IN ENGINEERING NARROW ESCAPES
INTRODUCTION:
Dangerous form of Hide and Seek; David hiding with his loyal band of
followers (now about 600 men); Saul seeking to destroy him with all the power and
resources of the military at his command as well as intelligence gathering resources
Have you ever been in a tight spot … questioning God’s ability to deliver;
Finding grace to help just in the nick of time
5. (:5) Obedience Leads to Blessing (but can also heighten our danger)
“he led away their livestock and struck them with a great slaughter”
C. (:13-14) The Hardship of the Wilderness is Better than the Comforts of the Palace
“And David stayed in the wilderness in the strongholds.”
Roe: They commemorated it. That says something about David and his me n's view of
their own resources as adequate. They memorialized that place as a worship act to their
God, as an altar like Abraham. As Abraham trekked through the land, wherever God
appeared to him, he erected an altar. David and his men knew who got them out of that
mess, YHWH, and they called it the Rock of Escape, literally "the Rock of Slipperies."
They slipped away from Saul.
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) How does God demonstrate His Sovereignty and His Providential Care by leading
us to the very brink of our fears? Why does God allow the pressure to build to the point
where it is almost unbearable?
2) Was the Lord angry with David for inquiring a second time (vs. 4) after his men
were hesitant to obey the initial command? Was this a lack of faith on David’s part or a
wise move to recheck and make sure?
3) Note how the Lord used Abiathar to provide guidance and protection for David and
his men. Apart from the awful slaughter of the priests in chapter 22, David would not
have had such a valuable resource at hand. How has God caused something in your life
that looked very bad on the surface to turn out very good in the end?
4) What memorials have we erected for our families to celebrate the Lord’s faithfulness
and provision?
**********
Deffinbaugh: Jonathan is the Barnabas of the Old Testament. What great encouragers
both these men are. In the Book of Acts, Barnabas starts out as the prominent leader,
and Saul (the apostle Paul) is but a man whom Barnabas takes under his wing. As time
passes, it becomes clear that God has chosen Paul to assume the dominant role. When
this becomes evident, Barnabas joyfully accepts this fact and becomes Paul’s most loyal
supporter.
The same spirit is seen in Jonatha n. He is the king apparent, the descendant of Saul
whom all expect to rule in his father’s place in time to come. Because of Saul’s sins,
God rejects him as king and designates David as the next king. Jonathan realizes this
and, like Barnabas in New Testament times, becomes David’s most loyal friend and
supporter. When David is in danger and his spirit seems to wane, Jonathan makes his
way to and through the wilderness to seek out his friend to encourage him. This he
obviously does.
Roe: There is a mountainous range in this wilderness of desert. "The rock" is probably
a conelike mountain or mound sitting out in the desert all alone. It would be a beautiful
hiding place as long as no one knew you were there, but the Ziphites have told Saul all
of the hiding places of David. Everyone of them! Trying to capture a guerrilla band like
David's is like hitting a body of mercury. It goes in all directions! Saul needs to get
David holed up somewhere, like he had in Keilah, so he can surround him. The Ziphites
tell David, "Saul is coming after you," so he heads for this cone where he can hide.
No one is going to look for him in the middle of the desert on a barren mountain with
very little water, in fact, there is very possibly no water there at all. No pasture either,
and 600 men needing food and drink. Ordinarily no one would look there but the
Ziphites tell Saul exactly where David is. So there is David holed up, and Saul's got
him.
Ryrie: Re city of Keilah – “a city of Judah about 3 miles S. of Adullam, bordered on the
territory of the Philistines, who would raid the threshing floors after the Israelites had
done the hard work of harvesting and processing the grain. ”
Blaikie : “What wonders cannot faith perform when it gets clear of all the entanglements
of carnal feeling, and stands, firm and erect, on the promise of God! How infinitely
would such a faith relieve and sustain us in the common troubles and anxieties of life,
and in deeper perplexities connected with the cause of God!”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 24:1-22
BIG IDEA:
HONORING UNJUST AUTHORITY POSITIONS THE RIGHTEOUS FOR
ULTIMATE VINDICATION
Gordon: “the tearing of a robe, and especially the hem of a robe, could be a highly
symbolic act in the near east. We have already had an instance in 15:27f., where the
loss of a kingdom is portended (cf. 1 Ki. 11:30f.). In certain circumstances the grasping
or releasing of a hem could indicate submission or rebellion on the part of the person
responsible.”
C. (:6) The Sanctity of the Lord’s Anointed Must Take Precedence Over Personal
Ambition and Even Common Sense
“Far be it from me because of the Lord that I should do this thing to my lord, the
Lord’s anointed.”
D. (:7) Godly Leadership Can Protect the Impetuous From Grave Error
“And David persuaded his men with these words and did not allow them to rise
up against Saul.”
B. (:9) Question of Credibility – Why do you believe the lies about me?
Deffinbaugh: David reminds the king that men can be known by their fruits. In the
words of the ancient proverb, David quotes, “Out of the wicked comes forth
wickedness” (verse 13). David has done nothing wicked toward Saul, and he assures
Saul his hand will not be against him in the future (verse 13). He also reminds the king
that his fears about David are exaggerated. David likens himself to a dead dog and to a
single flea (verse 14). How can such a great man as Saul, with all his military might,
can have such fears about David?
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) To what lengths will Satan go to try to disrupt the kingdom of God and His program
for the ages? Look at how quick Saul was to go the extra mile to seek after David to
destroy him.
3) What type of training and knowledge must have informed David’s conscience to get
him to respond as he did?
4) Are we content to leave matters in the hands of the Lord as David was?
**********
Davis: “This act brought no great joy to David, for his heart ‘smote him’ in that he had
mistreated God’s anointed (cf. v. 5). David recognized that this deed was of his own
bidding and not that which was commanded by God. In addition to that fact, David was
very sensitive to the sanctity of the throne. As far as David was concerned, Saul was
still God’s anointed. Nowhere had the Lord indicated that it was his time to assume the
throne. In the light of these facts, David considered his act most inappropriate.”
Gordon: “As king, Saul himself should have been the vindicator of the oppressed –
except that he is, in this instance, the oppressor. David therefore appeals to Yahweh for
his vindication. In fact, Saul pronounced sentence against himself in verse 17.”
Blaikie : “We can hardly think of a stronger temptation … than that under which David
now lay. In the first place, there was the prospect of getting rid of the weary life he was
leading, -- more like the life of a wild beast hunted by its enemies, than of a man eager
to do good to his fellows, with a keen relish for the pleasures of home and an
extraordinary delight in the services of God’s house. Then there was the prospect of
wearing the crown and wielding the sceptre of Israel, -- the splendours of a royal
palace, and its golden opportunities of doing good. Further, there was the voice of his
followers urging him to the deed, putting on it a sacred character by ascribing to it a
Divine permission and appointment. And still further, there was the suddenness and
unexpectedness of the opportunity. Nothing is more critical than a sudden opportunity
of indulging an ardent passion; with scarcely a moment for deliberation, one is apt to be
hurried blindly along, and at once to commit the deed.”
Roe: Quotes this poem which appears in Chapter 2 of Ray Stedman's book "The
Servant Who Rules, Mark 1-8". It is anonymous:
Roe:
Has it ever struck you that the tragedy of Saul's life is that it is lived in a constant state
of tension? He really does love David. There really is a father-son relationship there.
Saul is not a degenerate maniac. He is an outstanding man, although admittedly living
in his own strength instead of God's, but he really is an outstanding man. He is a far
better father than David. He was a great king while he was walking with the Lord. He is
a superb general. His own sons love him. His son, godly Jonathan, goes to his death
with him. His other sons also stay with him and are killed alongside their father Saul
in his last battle. In the midst of his madness, Saul's sons die with their father. What do
the sons of David do? They fight among themselves and one son even tries to kill David
and take over his throne. Humanly speaking Saul is really an extraordinary man.
Tragically though, Saul lives much of his live dominated by the flesh even though he
has a godly background. "Saul" means "prayed for." Since his father named him
"prayed for," he probably was an answer to prayer. And Saul, in the depths of his soul,
really wants to do good, but he is in bondage to the flesh which says, "I come
first." "Me, myself and I," the unholy trinity. Have you ever thought about the
horrendous tension Saul must have undergone?
Deffinbaugh: In his book, Spiritual Leadership, J. Oswald Sanders speaks of three
principles which govern spiritual leadership:
- Sovereignty
- Suffering
- Servanthood
I believe this dear brother is absolutely right, and that these three principles can be seen
in the life of David as God prepares him for spiritual leadership. Let us consider each of
the three.
The sovereignty of God is one of the principle factors in David’s thinking about
leadership as well. God sovereignly raised up Saul as Israel’s king. Though Samuel
anoints David as Israel’s next king, David believes it is God who will remove Saul and
that this is not his task. So long as God keeps Saul in power, to lift his hand against Saul
is to lift his hand against God. Circumstances may have been favorable for David or one
of his men to kill Saul, but David’s belief in the sovereignty of God keeps him from
doing so.
From the time David is anointed king to the time he is appointed king, David endures a
great deal of suffering. Most of his suffering comes from the hand of Saul. David’s
ascent to the throne is not in spite of his suffering, but by means of it. Suffering is the
means by which God prepares David for leadership. And this is no exception. Joseph’s
suffering at the hand of his brothers prepared Joseph to lead and prepared a way of
deliverance for his family. Israel’s suffering in Egypt prepared the people of God for
the exodus and their life as free men and women. Our Lord’s suffering prepared Him
for the ministry which He will have as King of Kings and Lord of Lords. Our suffering
accomplishes exactly the same thing.
David’s men are tempting him to shortcut his sufferings and to hasten his rule as king
by killing Saul. Their temptation is little different from the temptation of our Lord by
Satan in the wilderness at the beginning of his public ministry (see Matthew 4:1-11;
Luke 4:1-12). We too are tempted to avoid suffering and to get right into the glory, but
suffering is God’s appointed means of bringing us to glory. David is willing to suffer in
order to obey God, even though it seems to be inconsistent with his future reign.
David serves his master, Saul, faithfully. His conscience troubles him when he cuts off
a portion of Saul’s robe. This is not serving Saul faithfully. He refuses to consider
killing Saul, or to let his men do so. This is not serving Saul. Suffering is the price
David is willing to pay to serve Saul faithfully. Saul is, in a sense, David’s enemy, and
God has put his life in David’s hands. But David believes that in order to do what is
good in his sight, he will have to serve Saul, not slay him. And in order to serve Saul,
he will have to endanger his own life. So David lets Saul go and then reveals himself to
Saul outside the cave. David goes so far as to submissively rebuke Saul, pointing out
that he is not his enemy, and that he has done only good toward him. David never
ceases to serve Saul in submission, as long as he is alive and as long as he is God’s
king. David does “good” toward Saul, as Saul himself confesses, and this David does
by suffering at Saul’s hand, by serving Saul, and by submitting himself to Saul, looking
ultimately to the sovereign God for justice and retribution.
TEXT: 1 Samuel 25:1-44
BIG IDEA:
SPIRITUAL LEADERS MUST RESTRAIN THEIR EXERCISE OF POWER TO
FOLLOW THE PATH OF DISCERNMENT RATHER THAN IMPULSIVELY
RESPONDING TO PROVOCATION
(:1) BACKGROUND
Death of Samuel – note how he was respected by all of Israel
David goes to the wilderness of Paran
Deffinbaugh: David learns that Nabal is sheering his sheep. When the sheering is done,
there is a time of celebration for all the workers, and for anyone else nearby who is not
so fortunate. During this festive time, Judah goes up to Timnah, and there manages to
get his daughter- in- law Tamar pregnant (Genesis 38:12-26). At this time of celebration,
Absalom persuades David to let his sons come to his home to celebrate, thus enabling
Absalom to have his revenge against Amnon by killing him (2 Samuel 13:23-29). We
know tha t at such times the Law of Moses instructed the Israelites to be generous with
those who were not so fortunate (see Deuteronomy 14:28-29; 26:10-13; Nehemiah
8:10-12). For David to ask Nabal for a gift is not unusual at all. And since David’s men
had contributed to Nabal’s well-being and wealth, David’s request is even more
reasonable.
Deffinbaugh: If Abigail has succeeded in convincing David that killing Nabal will not
be worth the effort, she now presses on to show David how taking vengeance will be
detrimental to him. She begins by pointing out that the Lord has restrained David from
shedding blood and from avenging himself by his own hand (verse 26). Is she referring
to this very moment, or is she speaking of the way God kept David from avenging
himself against Saul, one chapter earlier? I am not certain on this. But with these words
she does indicate that the hand of God is in all of this, that God is restraining David
from shedding innocent blood and from avenging himself. She expresses her certainty
that if David leaves vengeance to God, God will deal appropriately with Nabal, as with
all others who seek evil against David.
It took a lot for such an important man like David to be willing to listen and learn from
the wife of someone he despised.
Roper: This is quite a speech that Abigail makes. In essence she is saying, "David,
you're wrong." In fact she says, "David, what you are doing is evil. You're trying to
save yourself, trying to avenge yourself. You're trying to seek your own rights, and
what you're doing is not right. When you become king this will haunt you, it will live in
your conscience to the end of your days. You see, David, your life is bound up with the
life of God. The battle that you are fighting is God's battle; the life that you're living
is God's life. And God will take care of his own. You don't need to fight yourself, and
you don't need to defend yourself; God will defend you. Let him. Don't take vengeance
on your enemies, let God take vengeance." That is quite a strong rebuke - coming from
an unknown woman to a man who is soon to be king of Israel.
Roe: “Now, notice what Abigail does not do. She does not desert her husband. She
does not deceive her husband. She goes right back to her old abusive, hard, unteachable,
irascible, evil Nabal, instead of running off with David.
…
The Abigail principle does no t give you the right in the New Testament to go out and
deliberately do something against your husband's wishes, knowing that you have
usurped his place of headship. In the New Testament you are to submit to your husband
in everything-, as to the Lord, trusting the Lord to deal with your husband as Abigail
did. She went back and lived with Nabal as his wife. She went back to spend the rest of
her years with a man who\ was going to be abusive and angry and hostile to her. She
did not run off with David or run home to mother. She went back to her husband,
willing to accept whatever the consequences were of her actions, for YHWH's sake.”
2. Proposed to Abigail
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) What was Nabal’s motivation for refusing David and his men assistance? Why did
David assume that Nabal would help them and why did he react so strongly to the
rejection?
2) What principles about a wife submitting to her husband can be gleaned from this
passage? Did Abigail overstep her bounds in some areas? Where is she to be
commended? In terms of progressive revelation, how much more accountable are we
today for such doctrines that have been more fully developed in the NT?
3) What contrasts can you draw from this passage between wisdom and foolishness?
4) What did Abigail mean in vs. 31 by her exhortation that David in later years “When
the Lord shall deal well with my lord, then remember your maidservant”? Do you think
she harbored any hope of some day being David ’s wife?
**********
Deffinbaugh: David is somehow willing to deal with the treatment Saul hands out, but
not with the insults of Nabal. Why? I think we may have a clue. First, Saul is David’s
superior, in terms of authority. David is Saul’s servant. He is willing to take unfair
treatment from his superior. Second, David has been promised the kingdom, once Saul
is out of the picture. David can handle abuse from Saul because he knows that before
long he will fill Saul’s vacated throne.
Nabal is not David’s superior, and he does not at all like the treatment he receives from
him. Furthermore, David is not thinking or acting as a man of faith when he sets out to
kill Nabal and all the males in his household. David expects an immediate “return” on
his “investment” of serving Nabal. He expects the reward to come from Nabal, now. He
is not looking for a heavenly reward, then.
How many of us minister to others with a measuring stick in our hands? We are willing
to love and serve others sacrificially, but with a certain set of expectations. We expect
that sacrificial love and service should be reciprocated. When in return for our doing
good, our neighbor gives us evil, like David, we get hot under the collar and look for
some way to retaliate. We forget that, like Christ, our words and deeds may bring about
persecution and suffering, rather than approval and gratitude. Our reward in heaven will
be great, but there may be no such rewards on earth. Let us be careful to do our good
works as to the Lord, looking to Him for our reward, and not the recipients of our
sacrificial service. David may have learned here that the problem with acting like a
servant is that people begin to treat you like a servant. It is one thing to serve in order to
be promoted; it is something quite different to serve to be demoted.
Roe: Nabal no t only turns David down saying, "Who is David?" (a national hero a few
years back), but also "'Who is this son of Jesse?,' this poor family with no background?
He is just a slave running away from his master, and there are a bunch of those all over
the place." In fact, a lot of David's men may well be exactly that. If you remember, his
force is made up of "discontents," men in debt, those who are "bitter of soul." So Nabal
may even be making an allusion to the kind of people David is running around with.
Nabal deliberately is going out of his way to insult David. Why? Because it will
ingratiate him with Saul. He chooses sides. He takes the expedient way, but
unfortunately he runs into a redheaded Jew.
...
What is David's problem? Ego. His pride has been injured. It is not the welfare of his
men that bothers him, although he is undoubtedly going to take care of them by taking a
number of Nabal's sheep. The trouble is David's ego has been crushed, and you just do
not shaft David especially in front of others. All his life he has been the runt of the
litter. All his life people have stepped on him. All his life he has had this resentment,
this hostility, building up in him. Someday he is going to get even, and here he has four
hundred skilled guerilla warriors armed with iron weapons which they have taken from
the Philistines at Keilah. Nabal only has a household with a few weapons and relatively
few servants. It is going to be a total slaughter. David is going to get even for all the
things that have happened to him down through the years.
Roper: Now, in the Scriptures a fool is not necessarily a man who acts ignorant ly or
foolishly, as we use that term. He is a man who has rejected the truth about God. As
you read Proverbs you discover that there are only two kinds of people in the world:
wise men, and fools. Wise men are people who respond to the truth of God in
obedience. They fear God and they let the truth live in their lives. Therefore they are
wise. It has nothing to do with their intelligence of education; it is a moral issue.
They are wise because they behave according to the truth. But a fool is a man who has
rejected the truth. That is why the Psalmist says, "The fool has said in his heart 'There is
no God.' " It is not an intellectual issue; it is a moral issue. He had not made room for
God in his heart.
...
There is another thing we need to notice here. In verse 22 David tha nks the Lord and
thanks Abigail because he has been kept back from bloodshed and from saving himself.
Then in verse 34 he mentions that the Lord God of Israel has restrained him from
harming both her and her household. David was restrained. He learned at this point, I
believe, to let the Lord control him. He recognized that he wasn't free to do as he
pleased. He couldn't run amok, he couldn't redress the things which had been done
against him. He had to count on the Lord, and the Lord disciplined and restrained
and controlled him. And for David, that was the most valuable lesson he could learn,
because he could not reign as a king until he had learned to let God reign in his own
life. He learned this lesson from Abigail, and I believe that this was a pivotal point in
David's life.
Blaikie : The revengeful purpose and rash vow of David were not the result of deliberate
consideration; they were formed under the influence of excitement, -- most unlike the
solemn and prayerful manner in which the expedition at Keilah had been undertaken.
God unacknowledged had left David to misdirected paths. But if we blame David, as
we must, for his heedless passion, we must not less admire the readiness with which he
listens to the reasonable and pious counsel of Abigail. With the ready instinct of a
gracious heart he recognizes the hand of God in Abigail’s coming – this mercy had a
heavenly origin; and cordially praises Him for His restraining providence and
restraining grace. He candidly admits that he had formed a very sinful purpose; but he
frankly abandons it; accepts her offering, and sends her away in peace.
TEXT: 1 Samuel 26:1-25
BIG IDEA:
THE UNJUSTLY ACCUSED FUGITIVE REFUSES TO TAKE MATTERS
INTO HIS OWN HANDS WHILE EXPOSING THOSE WHO ARE TRULY
GUILTY
2. (:10) Vengeance Belongs to the Lord – both in terms of Type and Timing
Possible Options Foreseen by David in Faith:
a) Immediate Judgment -- “surely the Lord will strike him”
b) Natural Resolution -- “or his day will come that he dies”
c) Violent End -- “or he will go down into battle and perish”
No positive outcomes foreseen here; David had a confidence in the
Lord’s justice
II. (:13-16) PIN THE TAIL ON THE DONKEY – IF THE SHOE FITS WEAR
IT – HUMILIATION OF ABNER
A. (:13) Platform for Placing Blame
“Then David crossed over to the other side, and stood on top of the mountain at
a distance with a large area between them”
2. Spiritual Stress
“saying, ‘Go, serve other gods.’”
F. (:20b) Reminder of the Futility and Absurdity of Continuing to Chase After David
“The king of Israel has come out to search for a single flea, just as one hunts a
partridge in the mountains.”
2. Divine Providence
“may He deliver me from all distress”
(:25b) CONCLUSION:
“So David went on his way, and Saul returned to his place.”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Do you think David came into the camp in anger intending to kill Saul and then
repented and changed his mind, or do you think David all along was restrained in his
actions and only intended to make his point before Saul and Abner? Why did David
give back the spear but apparently keep the water jug?
2) Was it wise for David to publicly humiliate Abner in the way that he did?
3) Why such a strong connection between the geographic land of Israel and the
opportunity to worship the one true God? Why did David equate making him a fugitive
with forcing him to seek after other gods?
4) What lessons from the life of Saul do we learn about the difference between worldly
sorrow and genuine repentance?
**********
Roe: Notice David's humanness. He has just had a tremendous spiritual vic tory, but he
cannot resist just one little jab. Now, David can not coarse talk Saul because in Exodus
20, Scripture says you are not allowed to revile God or curse the ruler of your people.
However, it says nothing about cursing the General of your people. So David has a little
proxy vengeance here. He goes way over on the other side of the hill and holds up the
spear and the jug of water. The jug was right by Saul's head as was the spear. He takes
this opportunity to taunt Abner, the man who has been harassing him. This is a very
tactical error. (Abner is now commander of the king's army. David used to be
commander of Saul's army. Possibly there was rivalry between them even then.) Abner
is quite a general, and David causes him to lose face in front of 3,000 of his troops.
Abner is an oriental. How do you think Abner is going to respond? Poor old David just
can not resist this kind of thing. When David, upon Saul's death, becomes king of
Judah, Abner takes the remaining son of Saul, Ishbosheth, and with the ten northern
tribes sets up his own kingdom in opposition to David. He does not return to David
until Ishbosheth insults him and he loses face in Israel. Only then does he deliver Israel
to David. David's little indulgence here may well have kept him from becoming king of
all of Israel for several years. When you have a spiritual victory, don't push your luck.
The retribution of God is always there. When you disobey God you will pay for it
somewhere down the line. I think this incident is one of the basic reasons Abner refused
to allow the ten tribes of Israel to join with Judah. under David as king.
Do some scholars agonize that chapter 26 is too similar to chapter 24? It is similar,
because it is a kind of replay of chapter 24. When God wants to teach us a lesson, if we
fail to learn that lesson through one experience, God will continue to bring experiences
our way which confront us with the same basic test. I think the reason there is a second
incident in chapter 26, so similar to the one described in chapter 24, is that God wanted
David to retake the same test so that he received a higher score.
Rick Gillespie-Mobley:
Saints, there are plenty of opportunities which are going to come your way, but it’s not
God’s will for you to take them. Some come as a test, others as a temptation.
You may think, I can’t pass up this opportunity. Let me ask you this, if you take the
opportunity will you be drawn closer to God? Will you be sacrificing your family
because of no time or energy to give them? Will you be selling a little piece of your
soul because of some compromise you have to make. If something is of God, God does
not require you to sacrifice part of your relationship to him. Part of our problem is we
think of what is convenient rather than what is best.
...
This was the last time King Saul pursued David, but it was not because of a change on
Saul’s part. David went to the land of the Philistines and Saul was afraid to pursue him
in Philistine. Not long afterwards King Saul lost his life in the battle with the
Philistines. God being faithful and true to His word, He made David King over Israel
without David having to murder anyone to obtain the position.
Blaikie : “David doubtless parted from Saul with the old conviction that kindness was
not wanting in his personal feelings, but that the evil influences that were around him,
and the fits of disorder to which his mind was subject, might change his spirit in a
single hour from that of generous benediction to that of implacable jealousy. ”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 27:1-12
BIG IDEA:
DESPAIR FUELS DESPERATION RESULTING IN A LIFE OF DECEPTION
No sign of David inquiring after God in this passage; no waiting upon the Lord for
guidance; no evidence of faith; no clinging to God’s promises;
It is always a problem when one leaves the promised land without explicit divine
command
“David with his two wives, Ahinoam the Jezreelitess, and Abigail the
Carmelitess”
C. (:4) Accomplishing His Short-sighted Objective Provides David with a False Sense
of Security
“Now it was told Saul that David had fled to Gath, so he no longer searched for
him.”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) What type of defe atist thinking enters our mind – despite all that God has done for
us in His grace and His providence in providing for us and protecting us?
2) Do we ever get tired of trying to follow the Lord and just lay aside any efforts at
seeking Him and take matters into our own hands? What has been our experience in
those times?
3) Was David justified in such a wholesale slaughter of the enemy – were they truly
under “the ban” or was this excessive in this case?
4) What impact, if any, do you think David’s two wives had on his decision making
during this period of time?
**********
(1) In 19:18-24 he had fled to the home of Samuel in Ramah. There he found true
refuge in the Word of God, which he celebrated in Psalm 119, believed by many Bible
scholars to have been composed by David during this time.
(2) In 21:10-15 we read of David’s brief visit to the Philistine city of Gath, before
King Achish. His uneasiness at being on the very soil of Israel’s bitter rivals
convinced him that he had placed himself at great personal risk, and he feigned
madness in order to effect his escape.
(3) Much of the rest of the book refers to David’s seeking refuge in any number of
deserts, most likely in hopes that the vast expanses of wilderness into which he fled
deeper and deeper would separate him from Saul. It is clear, however, that Saul always
found David in these places, sometimes being tipped off by locals who were willing to
turn the "outlaw" in.
b. Now in Chapter 27 it appears that David has reached his emotional limit.
Weary of being hounded, convinced that Saul will not give up his relentless pursuit,
David seems to have decided to flee Israel permanently, returning to the land of the
Philistines.
(1) He and his entire army -- along with their families -- are said in v.2 to have
"settled" there.
(2) Saul is so convinced that David is gone for good that in v.4 he finally ends his
chase.
(3) David again goes before King Achish, this time to request a "permanent"
place of refuge within his territory. Achish, seemingly convinced that David has,
indeed, become an authentic exile, gives his entourage the town of Zik lag,
where, we read in v.7, David remained for _____ months, until the death of Saul.
(4) "David’s faith in God was at a low ebb to utter such words as those of 27:1. He
was running away from God, and it was of the mercy of God that he was not consumed.
The Ziklag experience of David was dark indeed. Throughout it all we do not once
hear him mention God. Not once is there a song on his lips. Not once do we hear of
the priest or the prophet or David consulting with God. Let each child of God take
solemn warning. When clouds gather around, and faith is beginning to weaken, let
us not in sudden panic ‘speedily escape into the land of the Philistines,’ but rigidly
and persistently continue to trust in the Lord with all our heart, and wait patiently for
Him."
- Irving Jensen: I & II Samuel: A Self-Study Guide
Roe: David was getting tired of being chased around the wilderness. He began to tire of
God's total provision. He wanted to have this thing over with. He wanted to be out from
under the pressure, to be free from the possibility of death, to be free from the constant
tension of sleeping with one hand on his sword and one ear listening for the special task
force, run by a mad man, designed to get him. These were very normal, natural desires.
In themselves there was nothing wrong with them, but he needed to ge t back to Judah,
out of Moab, where he could learn that God would be his shield; that God would be his
"exceeding great reward" as God had told Abraham. God was committed to
David becoming king of Israel. He had anointed him to replace Saul, not to be slain by
Saul, and David knew that. So his desire to get out from under the pressure may have
been normal and natural but it was wrong. The Philistines were the one outfit that
seemed to be holding their own against Saul, so, David figured that was the place to go
to ease the pressure. Things had been seesawing back and forth. The more Saul pursued
David, neglecting his kingship, the more the Philistines moved onto the frontiers and
took over the land. David was just plain tired of going through the process of what God
calls "boot camp," being honed, chafed, molded, "disciplined" in Hebrews 12,
into the image and likeness of God, into a man after God's own heart. He wanted out.
So, he said to himself, "I think I'll escape over into the territory of the Philistines."
...
David, to save his own skin, exposes six hundred men and their families to the
paganism of the Philistines after he had just pleaded with Saul [chapter 26, verse 20],
"Don't let me be chased out of the country. 'Don't let my blood fall to the ground away
from the Lord.'" He wanted to be where he could worship his God. The tabernacle, of
course, was where the Jews worshipped their God. But now David is willing to pay any
price, no matter how it will influence his people or how it will influence their children,
as long as he can stay alive.
Deffinbaugh:
You can imagine that David, his 600 fighting men and all their families, must have
made quite an impact on Gath. It is not out of consideration for Achish or Gath that
David makes a request of the king, however. David approaches Achish with a request.
He asks if he can be given a city where he and his followers and families can live that is
not under foot. It seems a reasonable request, and so Achish gives David the city of
Ziklag. This city is 25 miles or so to the south and east of Gath. It is somewhat out of
the way, from a Philistine perspective, and not all that distant from Israelite cities. It
gives David and his followers a “place of their own,” in an area where David’s
activities will not be monitored by Achish. It is something like moving far enough away
from your in- laws to have a life of your own. David dwelt in Philistia a year and four
months, but the town of Ziklag becomes a permanent possession of the Israelite kings
(verses 6-7).
...
About this time, David must be mentally patting himself on the back: “It can’t get any
better than this.” David does not have to hide out in the desolate “God forsaken”
wilderness areas of Israel; he can freely go anywhere he wants, with respect. He can
even drop in on the king. He does not have to “beg” for a handout for his men, but
rather can live high on the spoils of his raids. He does not have to fear that the Israelites
will betray him; he frequents Israelite villages and towns, bringing their leaders presents
from the spoils of war. And if Saul will not deal with the enemies of Israel who
surround this nation, David will. David seems to have the best of both (Israelite and
Philistine) worlds. And so it appears, but not for long. The chickens, as we say, are
about to come home to roost.
Davis: “David was suspicious of permanently residing near or in the royal court of
Achish and requested a territory of his own in the countryside (v. 5). This he did so he
would be free from the constant surveillance to which he would be exposed in the
capital city. Also, David probably wanted freedom to observe his own religious rites.
David’s decision also may have involved his attempt to protect his followers from
assimilation with Philistine religious ideas and customs. The fact that David was
accepted by the Philistines probably indicates that he was similar to the typical Habiru
of Canaan. Also, it is entirely probably that Achish was in desperate need of
reinforcements following his encounter with King Saul (cf. 23:27-28),”
TEXT: 1 Samuel 28:1-25
BIG IDEA:
FEAR OF THE FUTURE INTENSIFIES WHEN ONE LOSES ALL
CONNECTION WITH THE LORD AND TURNS INSTEAD TO PHYSICS
Roe: “First, Samuel, Saul's last pipeline to Yahweh, who will not answer Saul, is dead.
Secondly, apparently to cultivate Samuel, he destroyed all mediums and all wizards in
Israel. Any person in Israel who either practiced occulthood, or even went to someone
who did, was to be slain. Both the Deuteronomy and Levitical teachings were very
definite. God did not want any of them in the land. They were both defiling and
detestable to Jehovah. And so Saul obeys God, apparently in order to curry favor with
Samuel. He does remove from the land the mediums, the wizards, the witchcraft and
the necromancers, those that raise the dead. So now here he is without Samuel as the
pipeline to God and without an occult system to find out about the future.”
Did Saul know that David and his men were included in with the ranks
of the Philistines? Did this cause him even greater consternation?
(Deffinbaugh)
Deffinbaugh: Problem: The Philistines are camped in Shunem; Saul and the Israelite
army are camped in Gilboa. En-dor is approximately eight miles north of Gilboa, and to
get there, Saul has to go around the Philistines.
4. (:19) Prophecy of Impending Doom – both personally and for the nation
“Moreover the Lord will also give over Israel along with you into the
hands of the Philistines, therefore tomorrow you and your sons will be
with me. Indeed the Lord will give over the army of Israel into the
hands of the Philistines.”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) Was God making a huge effort to give Saul a last chance to repent by bringing back
Samuel from the dead to communicate with him, or was the demon really in charge in
this interchange? Was there any opportunity for Saul to repent at this point or was he
already too hardened in his heart and God was just communicating His judgments?
2) What types of fortune telling and witchcraft and spiritism exist today? What other
Scriptures give insight into how much God hates such demonstrations of the occult?
Do we really see the danger in such interactions?
3) Why would Saul even request to hear from Samuel, God’s prophet, if he had no
intention of changing his heart to truly confess his sins and repent?
4) Was the medium making a legitimate attempt at hospitality out of compassion for
Saul and a desire to escape repercussions on herself, or is the medium a type of the
temptation to trust in the flesh?
**********
For Saul to be forced to go into battle alone was nothing more than the natural results
of his decisions and actions."
- Kenneth Chafin: 1, 2 Samuel
Roe: If God cannot reach you with the love of God, he will try to reach you by the
wrath of God. As we go through this chapter, I want you to look at it as God's last
attempt to reach Saul. Look at it not for the wrath of God, but for the wrath of God used
as an instrument of the grace of God. God really wants Saul to change his mind. He
does something here he has never done in Scripture before. He brings back a man from
the dead. In Luke 16, Christ tells of a rich man living a lavish life while Lazarus, a poor
beggar, lies in front of his gate wishing for even the crumbs from his table. The
beggar is a believer The rich man is not. They both die. The rich man is in Hades in
torment. Lazarus is in Abraham's bosom, a picture of Paradise. The rich man begs to
have Lazarus come over, dip his fingers in water and put it to his lips for he is in
torment. But Abraham says, "I'm sorry he can't do that. 'Remember that during your life
you received your good things, and likewise Lazarus bad things, but now he is being
comforted here, and you are in agony. Besides all this, between us and you there is a
great chasm fixed.' We cannot cross over to you if we would, and you cannot cross
over to us if you would." So the rich man said, "Then I beg you send Lazarus back from
the dead to warn my five brothers so they don't come here." Abraham said, "They have
Moses and the Prophets," (The same law of God that Saul had). The rich man says,
"No, if someone goes to them from the dead, they will repent." Abraham says, "No,
they won't. If they will not repent because of Moses and the Prophets, they will not
repent even if a man comes back from the dead." It is my personal belief that in this
story Jesus is referring to the incident with Saul which we are about to study. I am not
saying that the Word of God teaches this, just that it is my personal belief.
...
Saul has two basic problems. One is a deep terror of the future and the second is a deep
physical weakness. Now, here is the compassionate flesh in action. The flesh has an
amazing ability to come in just at the right moment with just the wrong ans wer and just
the wrong focus. Saul is totally wiped out. It is his one chance to cry out to God in
terror, in anguish, in weakness and hopelessness and throw himself on the mercy of
God. God would have responded just like that . But in comes the flesh.
...
What does the flesh always try to appear like when it comes to rescue you? Yes, a
friend, a helper, a loving companion, someone whose arm goes around you. It's you. It's
good ole Bob the Slob back again, and we've been together for years.
Don't ever kid yourself that the flesh comes to you with "Evil" stamped across its
forehead. Satan never does anything like that. Satan masquerades as an angel of light in
the service of a ministry of righteousness and appears right at the wrong time, at the
crucial moment, looking good, but always focusing on the wrong thing. Saul has a
spiritual need and a physical need and what does the "maidservant" focus on? His
physical need., and she offers her credentials. What are her credentials?
Well, look at them, they are good. "Your maidservant has obeyed you," and secondly,
"I have taken my life in my hand for you," and "'I have listened to your words which
you spoke to me.' I have credentials that show you I can help you. I've been on your
side all along Now, because I'm on your side, please listen to me. I'm with you. Let's get
something to feed your body so you can get up and go out of here and go to your
destiny," which, of course, is down the tube. But we'll do it with strength and vigor! If
you are going to walk in the flesh, at least walk well. We giggle, but that is the terrible
tragedy. We feed the flesh and make it strong and healthy so it can destroy us. If we
would crucify it, cut off its source, it would wither, but no, we feed it.
Deffinbaugh: The woman now appeals to Saul to listen to her and take her advice. After
all, this is the least he can do for her when she has risked her life for him. She pleads
with the king to let her fix him something to eat, something to give him strength enough
to be on his way. He refuses. His appetite is gone. Both the woman and Saul’s servants
prevail upon him to eat, not because he is hungry, but because he must regain his
strength to return to his camp. Like the father of the prodigal son, the medium of En-dor
kills and prepares the fatted calf (see Luke 15:22-24, 29), but it is not for a feast of
celebration, nor because the prodigal has repented and returned. It is more like a wake.
She slaughters the calf and prepares it, along with some bread. The king eats, and then
goes out into the night. It is the darkest day of Saul’s life so far, but an even darker day
is yet to come -- the next day -- when Samuel’s prophecies are fulfilled.
...
Saul started out all right, but very quickly became careless about obeying God’s
commandments. Even when rebuked for his sins, he does not fully repent, and thus a
repetition of his sins is inevitable. Given Samuel’s prophetic declaration in chapter 15,
we should hardly be surprised to find Saul seeking divine guidance by means of a
medium. If a person finds God’s commands repulsive, he also finds them easy to cast
aside. Is it any wonder that such a person eventually turns to witches, mediums (or any
number of other means of obtaining guidance), when such people “direct” them in the
way they really wish to go in the first place (compare 2 Timothy 4:3-4)? We see that the
end of Saul’s life is tragic, but it should not be surprising. It is the logical outcome of
the path he has chosen to walk.
Chris Appleby: Well, Saul isn’t bored, but he is desperate. He can’t find a prophet who
can tell him what God wants him to do. So he resorts to a medium to try to contact
Samuel for one last piece of advice. It’s ironic isn’t it, that when Samuel was alive, Saul
took little notice of what he told him, but now that Samuel is dead Saul is willing to risk
the anger of the Lord in order to seek his advice.
Davis: What, then, was the purpose of God in bringing Samuel back for this
appearance? This unusual act on the part of God was certainly designed to emphasize
the doom of Saul and God’s displeasure for his coming to a necromancer. Robert
Jamieson suggests three additional reasons:
(1) To make Saul’s crime an instrument of his punishment.
(2) to show the heathen world God’s superiority on prophecy, and
(3) to confirm a belief in a future state after death.
TEXT: 1 Samuel 29:1-11
BIG IDEA:
GOD CAN MAKE A WAY OF ESCAPE WHEN THERE SEEMS TO BE NO
WAY
2. Israelites
“while the Israelites were camping by the spring which is in Jezreel”
3. Cited the Hero Reputation and Cult Following of David among the Israelites
“Saul has slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands”
3. Pragmatic Decision
“Now therefore return, and go in peace, that you may not displease the
lords of the Philistines”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) How does deception entangle us further and further so that our options are limited
and we seem unable to extricate ourselves?
2) Why does Achish use expressions that sound like he has some type of affinity with
the God of David?
cf. “As the Lord lives” (:6)
“like an angel of God” (:9)
3) Why was there such a strong difference in perception as to how David was viewed?
What was blinding Achish’s eyes to the truth?
**********
Davis: David was very diplomatic in his response to the words of Achish, for quickly to
agree with Achish’s command would be to raise questions concerning his loyalty to the
Philistine cause. But to object to it too vigorously might lead to engagement in the
Philistine battle with Israel which would place him in a most awkward position indeed!
Thus, very diplomatically, David reacted with surprise and indignation that his loyalty
should be questioned. Inwardly he certainly must have rejoiced at the deliverance from
the dilemma in which he found himself (v. 8). The mild reaction of David satisfied
Achish that David was truly an ally, but he continued to remind David that while he
was a man without guilt he still could not participate in the Philistine battle.”
Deffinbaugh: The author departs from a strictly chronological order in these chapters.
In chapter 28, we find the Israelites encamped at Gilboa, while the Philistines are at
Shunem (28:4). This is quite far to the north and the scene of the actual battle between
these two armies (see 31:1). But in chapter 29, the Philistines are gathered at Aphek,
while the Israelites are at Jezreel. This is considerably south of the sight described in
chapter 28, which means that the events of chapter 29 precede those of chapter 28. The
author has purposefully departed from the chronological order of events to a more
thematic order. He is more interested in making his point than providing us with a
chronological time line. It would seem that the author’s intent is to alternate between
Saul and David so as to continually contrast these two men.
Max Frazier, Jr.: Talk about being in a tight spot. That was David. Here was the future
king of Israel, anointed by God, heading north with the king of the Philistines to do
battle against the nation over which he was to be king. How could he battle against the
armies of Israel? And yet, if he turned and ran the Philistines would attack him as being
a traitor. Ever found yourself between a rock and a hard place? Ever been in a
situation where it seemed that any choice you made would be the wrong choice? How
many times have we witnessed the power of God coming to our rescue. Although
David had curried favor with the Philistine king, he had not really endeared himself to
the other Philistine leaders. They still viewed David with suspicion. So, when the time
for battle drew near, God moved in their hearts to ask David to withdraw from the
battle. Their motives were selfish. They did not want David to be given the
opportunity of turning against them. Yet, in their selfishness, they were being used by
God to answer that ache within David's heart. David found that God does provide a
way of escape, sometimes it is a literal escape, when temptations appear to overtake us.
We just need to wait in patience before Him. God will make a way even when there
seems to be no way. Praise the Lord!
Arthur Pink : Wondrous are the ways in which God preserves His saints. Many a one
has been withheld from that success in business on which he had fondly set his heart: it
was God delivering him from those material riches which would have ruined his soul!
Many a one was disappointed in a love affair: it was God delivering from an ungodly
partner for life, who would have been a constant hindrance to your spiritual progress!
Many a one was cruelly treated by trusted and cherished friends: it was God breaking
what would have proved an unequal yoke! Many a parent was plunged into grief by the
death of a dearly loved child: it was God, in His mercy, taking away what would have
proved an idol. Now we see these things through a glass darkly, but the Day will come,
dear reader, when we shall perceive clearly that it was the preserving hand of our
gracious God thus dealing with us at those very times when all seemed to be working
against us.
The above meditations have been suggested by what is recorded in 1 Samuel 29. At the
close of our last chapter we saw how mercifully God interposed to deliver His servant
from the snare of the fowler. Through his unbelief and self- will, David found himself in
a sore dilemma. Seeking help from the ungodly, he had placed himself under obligation
to the king of Gath. Pretending to be the friend of the Philistines and the enemy of his
own people, David was called upon by Achish to employ his men upon the attack which
was planned against Israel. Then it was that the Lord interposed and preserved the
object of His love from falling into much graver evil. He now graciously made "a way
to escape" (1 Cor. 10:13), lest His poor erring child should be tempted above that which
he was able.
http://www.pbministries.org/books/pink/David/david.htm
TEXT: 1 Samuel 30:1-31
BIG IDEA:
OUR GREATEST TRAGEDIES OFTEN ARE GOD’S TESTING GROUND TO
PROVIDE THE OPPORTUNITY FOR OUR GREATEST TRIUMPHS
Chestnut: Depending on how it is handled, a crisis can either make us or break us.
1. Illust. The Chinese do not have an alphabet as we know it. Rather than letters,
words are represented by symbols. They have an interesting word-symbol for "crisis."
It is a combination of the symbols for "danger" and "opportunity."
2. What is a crisis?
a. CRISIS: "A stage in a sequence of events at which the trend of all future
events is determined" (Random House College Dict.)
b. Everyone experiences times of crisis:
1) Graduation from high school (job, college, marry, Armed Forces?)
2) Laid off/quitting a job with nothing in sight.
3) Discovering a member of family has a drug/alcohol problem.
4) Having your husband/wife die; discover they are unfaithful.
c. Some people become STRONGER in these experiences; others WEAK.
1) WHY? Not what happens. How we DEAL with what happens!
2) POINT: How we react in moments of crisis will largely determine
whether such events MAKE/BREAK us.
Not taken captive by any nice, civilized group but by a barbaric bunch of thugs.
E. (:6b) Turning Point: “David Strengthened Himself in the Lord his God”
How do we do this in our walk with the Lord? Study the Psalms to get some
insight from David into this whole process.
2. Ephod
“Please bring me the ephod”
2. Prompt Response
“And He said to him, ‘Pursue, for you shall surely overtake them’”
3. Bonus Pledge
“and you shall surely rescue all.”
God is so gracious to answer beyond our wildest expectations.
This was not just going to be a revenge mission, but a successful rescue
mission.
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) How did the discovery of the sacking of Ziklag burst David’s bubble of feeling that
everything was going his way and that he didn’t really need to depend on the Lord but
could rely on his own powers of persuasion and deception? Have we ever needed a
drastic wake- up call?
2) Compare how the Amalekites treated their captors with how David and his men
destroyed everyone (men, women and children) in their conquests of the outlying
Philistine camps. Do you think David in his wildest dreams thought that he would
recover everyone and everything that had been taken?
3) How quick is God to respond positively to David once David turns from reliance
upon the flesh to seek after Him with his whole heart? What does this teach us about
God’s patience and grace and forgiveness?
4) How does David overcome the pettiness and selfishness of those who participated in
the victory by pointing their attention to giving God the glory? How did this help
establish a new code of conduct that was maintained down thru the years?
**********
QUOTES FOR REFLECTION:
Chestnut:
A. In Howard J. Clinebell's book, Basic Types of Pastoral Counseling, there
is a chapter, "Crisis Counseling."
1. Clinebell: One of the most productive things a counselor can do for
someone in a crisis is to prevent them from making rash decisions.
2. Isn't that the greatest danger in a crisis?
Davis: “When David returned to Ziklag, he took a large portion of the spoils which he
had recovered and sent it to the elders of Judah and to friends in various cities. This was
an important move on David’s part because it re-established contacts with the leaders of
Judah. His act was perhaps a way of expressing gratitude for the protection they had
afforded him in the hills of Judah when pursued by King Saul. Such an act would also
be a means of demonstrating his loyalty to the people of Judah. This was made
necessary because of his long association with the Philistines (a year and seven
months). Among the towns to receive goods from David was the town of Hebron
which was to become the capital of his first kingdom (v. 31).”
Blaikie : “Complaining men are generally selfish men. They objected to David’s
proposal to share the spoil with the whole body of his followers. Their proposal was
especially displeasing to David at a time when God had given them such tokens of
undeserved goodness. It was of the same sort as the act of the unforgiving servant in
the parable, who, though forgiven his ten thousand talents, came down with unmitigated
ferocity on the fellow-servant that owed him an hundred pence.”
Deffinbaugh:
We must remember the physical and mental condition of these men. They have just
traveled nearly 60 miles from Aphek back to Ziklag, no doubt pressing hard to get
home as soon as possible. They can rest up at Ziklag, once they arrive, or so they think.
Then, finding their loved ones kidnapped, their cattle stolen, and their city destroyed by
fire, they weary themselves weeping (verse 4). Now they are off in hot pursuit of the
enemy. The enemy raiding party has a substantial lead, and the trail is getting cold.
They can easily disappear into the wilderness. If they are to be overtaken in time to
rescue their loved ones, David and his men must move quickly.
I imagine David and his men are marching double time. As time passes and the heat of
the sun works on David and his men, they grow weary. When they come to the brook
Besor, a third of the men simply cannot go on. They have plenty of motivation – their
families are in danger, and they want to be there to rescue them – but they simply do
not have the strength to continue on. Two hundred men collapse there by the brook,
unable to press on. Even if they do go on, they will only slow the rest down. David and
the other 400 men press on, leaving much of their gear behind with the 200 so that they
can move faster and expend less energy.
...
David does not let these wicked men prevail. He takes the initiative in dealing with their
demands and handles them very well.169 He refuses to allow these men to have their
way, while showing them why they are wrong in what they demand. Consider David’s
reasoning.
(1) They have not earned these spoils, as they suppose. The victory and the spoils are a
gracious (and thus unmerited) gift from God. God gave these spoils, as He gave the
victory. How then can these men claim the spoils, as though they earned them?
(2) The victory is a team victory, and the team is greater than 400 in number. When
David employs the word us, it seems clear he includes all 600. “God gave the victory to
us,” David argues, “to the whole 600 men, and not just to the 400.”
(3) David’s 600 men are all brothers (verse 23). This is not just a collection of
individuals; it is a brotherhood. These 600 men are a family. When the Amalekite
raiders return to their camp, everyone in the camp celebrates in the victory; everyone
shares in the spoils. Should David’s men do any less?
(4) The battle is a team effort, with each member playing a different role. Just because
200 stayed behind does not mean they had no part in the victory. They stayed with the
baggage (as I understand it, the baggage of the 600 men), and thus they contribute to the
victory as well. Their victory is a collective victory, and so every man should have an
equal share of the spoils.
TEXT: 1 Samuel 31:1-13
BIG IDEA:
DEFEAT, DEATH AND DESECRATION MARK THE END OF THE LINE FOR
THE BACKSLIDDEN KING OF ISRAEL
D. Appropriate Mourning
“and fasted seven days”
**********
DEVOTIONAL QUESTIONS:
1) How did this tragic end for Saul and his sons fulfill Samuel’s prophecy back in
28:19?
2) Why did the Lord allow Jonathan to be killed despite his loyalty to David?
3) Why was the armor bearer hesitant to take Saul’s life? Was Saul wrong to try to
take his own life and spare the embarrassment of additional Philistine indignities?
What other details from 2 Sam. 1 help to fill out the story recorded here? Which story
is to be believed?
4) How does our disobedience and rebellion give the enemy opportunity to gloat and to
drag down the name of God? How can we make the glory of God our passionate
pursuit?
**********
Blaikie : “Saul seems never to have been deficient in personal courage, and in the course
of the battle he and his staff were evidently in the very thickest of the fight. …
The spirit of vaunting, which had so roused David against Goliath because he defied the
armies of the living God, appeared far more offensively than ever. Not only was Israel
defeated, but in the view of the Philistines Israel’s God as well.”
Davis: “The men of Jabesh- gilead had not forgotten Saul’s intervention on their behalf
at an earlier period of time (1 Sam. 11). In addition to that, it should be remembered
that some of the inhabitants of Jabeshgilead were Benjamites by marriage after the great
Benjaminite War as described in the later chapters of the book of Judges. . .
In the classical sense, Saul could not be called a great king, but that his achievements
were many is clear from David’s exquisite elegy recorded in II Samuel 1. Whatever
military and judicial victories may have been attributed to Saul, they are overshadowed
by his tragic spiritual failures.”
Gordon: “A different version is given by the Amalekite youth who reports Saul’s death
to David in 2 Samuel 1:6-10, but there is every reason to think that the Amalekite was
trying to do himself a favour by telling David what, as he thought, would earn his
commendation. ”
Deffinbaugh: “Clearly the author of our text is choosing to focus on Saul more than on
his sons or the nation Israel. For example, we are not told how Jonathan dies, although
we would very much like to know and although we would expect him to die like the
champion he was, fighting to his last breath. Before we look at the way Saul dies, let us
pause to recall that when Saul is killed, many Israelites also die, and many other
Israelites turn and flee, as we are told in verse 7. Those on the other side of the valley
and across the Jordan (who are not the focus of the Philistine attack) see the defeat of
Israel and the death of Saul and his sons, and know there is no hope of defeating the
Philistines. They flee for their lives, abandoning their cities, which the Philistines then
occupy. This great defeat not only reduces the size of Israel’s army, it reduces the size
of Israel. . . .
It is not a matter of coincidence that Saul is killed by the hands of the Philistines
(28:19) and by the hand of an Amalekite (28:18). A kind of poetic justice is described
here. Saul is reaping what he himself has sewn. He is killed by uncircumcised hands
because God said this was the way he would die. No matter how hard Saul tries to
change his destiny, he cannot succeed at thwarting God’s will or His word. Is his death
not one more attempt to disobey God, one final act of rebellion?
Like the first, Saul’s second request that his enemies not make sport of him is denied.
First, Saul is hit by a number of Philistine arrows, which literally drain the life out of
Saul. His slow, agonizing death is not a pretty sight. Saul does not go out looking good.
After Saul is dead, his armor is stripped from his body and his head cut off. The
Philistines must really enjoy this. And then they take Saul’s armor and his head and
parade them around their cities, taking them into the temple of their god. All of this
mocks not only Saul. but his God. The final indignity for Saul is that his body, along
with the bodies of his sons, is fastened to the wall of Bethshan. The indignities Saul
suffers in death could hardly be worse. . .
God’s word is absolutely reliable. God will do as He has promises. He will deal with sin
and rebellion in judgment; He will deal with trust and obedience in blessing. Saul is
removed from his throne and from life; David is preserved from Saul’s plots and soon
installed as king of Judah (and then of Israel). Before the first man ever sinned, God
declared that the penalty for sin was death (Genesis 2:16-17). From that point on, God
has spoken clearly to men with respect to sin. His word not only defines sin, it spells
out the consequences for sin – death (Romans 3:23; 6:23). God gave Saul time to
repent, but he did not. And so his death came to pass, even as God had said. If you have
never trusted in Jesus Christ for salvation, God is now giving you opportunity to repent.
You may, like Saul, choose to use this time for repentance as the opportunity to add to
your sins. But be assured, your sins will find you out. The wages of sin is death. If you
repent, by acknowledging your sin and trusting in Jesus Christ for salvation, you will
have eternal life. Be assured that God’s promises – both of judgment and of salvation –
are certain. Saul reminds us of this truth.”
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF 1 SAMUEL
BOOKS:
Baxter, J. Sidlow. Explore the Book. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing House,
1960.
Blaikie, W. G. The First Book of Samuel. New York, NY: A. C. Armstrong and Son,.
Clark, Gordon H. I & II Peter. Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing
Company, 1980.
Davis, John. The Birth of a Kingdom. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1970.
Keil and Delitzsch. Biblical Commentary on The Books of Samuel. Grand Rapids, MI:
1950.
Renwick, A. M. “I and II Samuel” in The New Bible Commentary. Grand Rapids, MI:
Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1956.
Ryrie, Charles. The Ryrie Study Bible. Chicago, IL: Moody Press, 1976.
(Study Bible)
Young, Fred E. “1 Samuel” in The Wycliffe Bible Commentary. Chicago, IL: Moody
Press, 1962.
SERMON ARCHIVES:
Appleby.
Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
Baeta, William.
Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
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http://www.prca.org/current/Articles/1%20Sam%202%2027-36.htm
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Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
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Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
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Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
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Website: http://www.bible.org
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Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
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Website: http://www.hopefortoday.org
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Sermon Notes from Church of the Savior, Frederick MD.
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Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
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Malick, David.
Website: http://www.bible.org
Mathew.
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Perkins, Raymond.
Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
Piper, John.
Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
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Website: http://www.abideinchrist.com
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Website: http://www.pbc.org
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Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
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http://www.ccos.org/09-1Sam-02-02-jk-note.html
Savidge, Richard.
Sermon Notes from Allentown Baptist Church, Camp Springs, MD.
Sisney, Terry.
Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
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Website: http://www.bible.org
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Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com
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Website: http://www.sermoncentral.com