Chapter 26:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Ruth 2 Samuel
1 Samuel 26
Complete Concise
David's troubles from Saul here begin again; and the clouds
return after the rain, when one would have hoped the storm had blown over, and
the sky had cleared upon that side; but after Saul had owned his fault in
persecuting David, and acknowledged David's title to the crown, yet here he
revives the persecution, so perfectly lost was he to all sense of honour and
virtue. I. The Ziphites informed him where David was (v. 1), and thereupon he
marched out with a considerable force in quest of him (v. 2, 3). II. David
gained intelligence of his motions (v. 4), and took a view of his camp (v. 5).
III. He and one of his men ventured into his camp in the night and found him and
all his guards fast asleep (v. 6, 7). IV. David, though much urged to it by his
companions, would not take away Saul's life, but only carried off his spear
and his cruse of water (v. 8-12). V. He produced these as a further witness
for him that he did not design any ill to Saul, and reasoned with him upon his
conduct (v. 13-20). VI. Saul was hereby convinced of his error, and once more
desisted from persecuting David (v. 21-25). The story is much like that which
we had (ch. 24). In both David is delivered out of Saul's hand, and Saul out
of David's.
Verses 1-5
Here, 1. Saul gets information of David's movements and acts
offensively. The Ziphites came to him and told him where David now was, in the
same place where he was when they formerly betrayed him, ch. 23:19. Perhaps
(though it is not mentioned) Saul had given them intimation, under-hand, that he
continued his design against David, and would be glad of their assistance. If
not, they were very officious to Saul, aware of what would please him, and very
malicious against David, to whom they despaired of ever reconciling themselves,
and therefore they stirred up Saul (who needed no such spur) against him, v. 1.
For aught we know, Saul would have continued in the same good mind that he was
in (ch. 24:17), and would not have given David this fresh trouble, if the
Ziphites had not put him on. See what need we have to pray to God that, since we
have so much of the tinner of corruption in our own hearts, the sparks of
temptation may be kept far from us, lest, if they come together, we be set on
fire of hell. Saul readily caught at the information, and went down with an army
of 3000 men to the place where David hid himself, v. 2. How soon do unsanctified
hearts lose the good impressions which their convictions have made upon them and
return with the dog to their vomit!
2. David gets information of Saul's movements and acts
defensively. He did not march out to meet and fight him; he sought only his own
safety, not Saul's ruin; therefore he
abode in the wilderness (v. 3),
putting thereby a great force upon himself, and curbing the bravery of his own
spirit by a silent retirement, showing more true valour than he could have done
by an irregular resistance. (1.) He had spies who informed him of Saul's
descent,
that he had come in very deed (v. 4.); for he would not believe
that Saul would deal so basely with him till he had the utmost evidence of it.
(2.) He observed with his own eyes how Saul was encamped, v. 5. He came towards
the place where Saul and his men had pitched their tents, so near as to be able,
undiscovered, to take a view of their entrenchments, probably in the dusk of the
evening.
Verses 6-12
Here is, I. David's bold adventure into Saul's camp in the
night, accompanied only by his kinsman Abishai, the son of Zeruiah. He proposed
it to him and to another of his confidants (v. 6), but the other either declined
it as too dangerous an enterprise, or at least was content that Abishai, who was
forward to it, should run the risk of it rather than himself. Whether David was
prompted to do this by his own courage, or by an extraordinary impression upon
his spirits, or by the oracle, does not appear; but, like Gideon, he ventured
through the guards, with a special assurance of the divine protection.
II. The posture he found the camp in
Saul lay sleeping in the
trench, or, as some read it,
in his chariot, and in the midst of his
carriages, with
his spear stuck in the ground by him, to be ready if
his quarters should by beaten up (v. 7); and all the soldiers, even those that
were appointed to stand sentinel, were
fast asleep, v. 12. Thus were
their eyes closed and their hands bound,
for a deep sleep from the Lord had
fallen upon them; something extraordinary there was in it that they should
all be asleep together, and so fast asleep that David and Abishai walked and
talked among them, and yet none of them stirred. Sleep, when God gives it to his
beloved, is their rest and refreshment; but he can, when he pleases, make it to
his enemies their imprisonment. Thus are the
stout-hearted spoiled; they have
slept their sleep, and none of the men of might have found their hands, at thy
rebuke, O God of Jacob! Ps. 76:5, 6.
It was a deep sleep from the Lord,
who has the command of the powers of nature, and makes them to serve his
purposes as he pleases. Whom God will disable, or destroy, he binds up with
a
spirit of slumber, Rom. 11:8. How helpless do Saul and all his forces lie,
all, in effect, disarmed and chained! and yet nothing is done to them; they are
only rocked asleep. How easily can God weaken the strongest, befool the wisest,
and baffle the most watchful! Let all his friends therefore trust him and all
his enemies fear him.
III. Abishai's request to David for a commission to dispatch
Saul with the spear that stuck at his bolster, which (now that he lay so fair)
he undertook to do at one blow, v. 8. He would not urge David to kill him
himself, because he had declined doing this before when he had a similar
opportunity; but he begged earnestly that David would give him leave to do it,
pleading that he was his enemy, not only cruel and implacable, but false and
perfidious, whom no reason would rule nor kindness work upon, and that
God
had now delivered him into his hand, and did in effect bid him strike. The
last advantage he had of this kind was indeed but accidental, when Saul happened
to be in the cave with him at the same time. But in this there was something
extraordinary; the deep sleep that had fallen on Saul and all his guards was
manifestly from the Lord, so that it was a special providence which gave him
this opportunity; he ought not therefore to let it slip.
IV. David's generous refusal to suffer any harm to be done to
Saul, and in it a resolute adherence to his principles of loyalty, v. 9. David
charged Abishai not to destroy him, would not only not do it himself, but not
permit another to do it. And he gave two reasons for it:-1. It would be a sinful
affront to God's ordinance. Saul was the Lord's anointed, king of Israel by
the special appointment and nomination of the God of Israel, the power that was,
and to resist him was to
resist the ordinance of God, Rom. 13:2. No man
could do it and be guiltless. The thing he feared was guilt and his concern
respected his innocence more than his safety. 2. It would be a sinful
anticipation of God's providence. God had sufficiently shown him, in Nabal's
case, that, if he left it to him to avenge him, he would do it in due time.
Encouraged therefore by his experience in that instance, he resolves to wait
till God shall think fit to avenge him on Saul, and he will by no means
avenge
himself (v. 10):
"The Lord shall smite him, as he did Nabal,
with some sudden stroke, or he shall
die in battle (as it proved he did
soon after), or, if not,
his day shall come to die a natural death, and I
will contentedly wait till then, rather than force my way to the promised crown
by any indirect methods." The temptation indeed was very strong; but, if he
should yield, he would sin against God, and therefore he will resist the
temptation with the utmost resolution (v. 11):
"The Lord forbid that I
should stretch forth my hand against the Lord's anointed; no, I will never
do it, nor suffer it to be done." Thus bravely does he prefer his
conscience to his interest and trusts God with the issue.
V. The improvement he made of this opportunity for the further
evidence of his own integrity. He and Abishai carried away the spear and cruse
of water which Saul had by his bed-side (v. 12), and, which was very strange,
none of all the guards were aware of it. If a physician had given them the
strongest opiate or stupifying dose, they could not have been faster locked up
with sleep. Saul's spear which he had by him for defence, and his cup of water
which he had for his refreshment, were both stolen from him while he slept. Thus
do we lose our strength and our comfort when we are careless, and secure, and
off our watch.
Verses 13-20
David having got safely from Saul's camp himself, and having
brought with him proofs sufficient that he had been there, posts himself
conveniently, so that they might hear him and yet not reach him (v. 13), and
then begins to reason with them upon what had passed.
I. He reasons ironically with Abner, and keenly banters him.
David knew well that it was from the mighty power of God that Abner and the rest
of the guards were cast into so deep a sleep, and that God's immediate hand
was in it; but he reproaches Abner as unworthy to be captain of the lifeguards,
since he could sleep when the king his master lay so much exposed. By this it
appears that the hand of God locked them up in this deep sleep that, as soon as
ever David had got out of danger, a very little thing awakened them, even David's
voice at a great distance roused them, v. 14. Abner got up (we may suppose it
early in a summer's morning) and enquired who called, and disturbed the king's
repose. "It is I," says David, and then he upbraids him with his
sleeping when he should have been upon his guard. Perhaps Abner, looking upon
David as a despicable enemy and one that there was no danger from, had neglected
to set a watch; however, he himself ought to have been more wakeful. David, to
put him into confusion, told him, 1. That he had lost his honour (v. 15):
"Art
not thou a man? (so the word is), a man in office, that art bound, by the
duty of thy place, to inspect the soldiery? Art not thou in reputation for a
valiant man? So thou wouldst be esteemed, a man of such courage and conduct that
there is none like thee; but now thou art shamed for ever. Thou a general! Thou,
a sluggard!" 2. That he deserved to lose his head (v. 16):
"You are
all worthy to die, by martial law, for being off your guard, when you had
the king himself asleep in the midst of you.
Ecce signumBehold this token.
See where the king's spear is, in the hand of him whom the king himself is
pleased to count his enemy. Those that took away this might as easily and safely
have taken away his life. Now see who are the king's best friends, you that
neglected him and left him exposed or I that protected him when he was exposed.
You pursue me as worthy to die, and irritate Saul against me; but who is worthy
to die now?" Note, Sometimes those that unjustly condemn others are justly
left to fall into condemnation themselves.
II. He reasons seriously and affectionately with Saul. By this
time he was so well awake as to hear what was said, and to discern who said it
(v. 17):
Is this thy voice, my son David? In the same manner he had
expressed his relentings, ch. 24:16. He had given his wife to another and yet
calls him
son, thirsted after his blood and yet is glad to hear his
voice. Those are bad indeed that have never any convictions of good, nor ever
sincerely utter good expressions. And now David has as fair an opportunity of
reaching Saul's conscience as he had just now of taking away his life. This he
lays hold on, though not of that, and enters into a close argument with him,
concerning the trouble he still continued to give him, endeavouring to persuade
him to let fall the prosecution and be reconciled.
1. He complains of the very melancholy condition he was brought
into by the enmity of Saul against him. Two things he laments:(1.) That he
was driven from his master and from his business:
"My lord pursues after
his servant, v. 18. How gladly would I serve thee as formerly if my service
might be accepted! but, instead of being owned as a servant, I am pursued as a
rebel, and my lord is my enemy, and he whom I would follow with respect compels
me to flee from him." (2.) That he was driven from his God and from his
religion; and this was a much greater grievance than the former (v. 19):
"They have
driven me out from the inheritance of the Lord, have made
Canaan too hot for me, at least the inhabited parts of it, have forced me into
the deserts and mountains, and will, ere long, oblige me entirely to quit the
country." And that which troubled him was not so much that he was driven
out from his own inheritance as that he was driven out from the
inheritance
of the Lord, the holy land. It should be more comfortable to us to think of
God's title to our estates and his interest in them then of our own, and that
with them we may honour him then that with them we may maintain ourselves. Nor
was it so much his trouble that he was constrained to live among strangers as
that he was constrained to live among the worshippers of strange gods and was
thereby thrust into temptation to join with them in their idolatrous worship.
His enemies did, in effect, send him to
go and serve other gods, and
perhaps he had heard that some of them had spoken to that purport of him. Those
that forbid our attendance on God's ordinances do what in them lies to
estrange us from God and to make us heathens. If David had not been a man of
extraordinary grace, and firmness to his religion, the ill usage he met with
from his own prince and people, who were Israelites and worshippers of the true
God, would have prejudiced him against the religion they professed and have
driven him to communicate with idolaters. "If these be Israelites," he
might have said, "let me live and die with Philistines;" and no thanks
to them that their conduct had not that effect. We are to reckon that the
greatest injury
Cursed be they before the Lord. Those fall under a curse
that thrust out those whom God receives, and send those to the devil who are
dear to God.
2. He insists upon his own innocency:
What have I done or
what evil is in my hand? v. 18. He had the testimony of his conscience for
him that he had never done nor ever designed any mischief to the person, honour,
or government, of his prince, nor to any of the interests of his country. He had
lately had Saul's own testimony concerning him (ch. 24:17):
Thou art more
righteous than I. It was very unreasonable and wicked for Saul to pursue him
as a criminal, when he could not charge him with any crime.
3. He endeavours to convince Saul that his pursuit of him is not
only wrong, but mean, and much below him:
"The king of Israel, whose
dignity is great, and who has so much other work to do,
has come out to seek
a flea, as when one doth hunt a partridge in the mountains," v. 20a
poor game for the king of Israel to pursue. He compares himself to a partridge,
a vert innocent harmless bird, which, when attempts are made upon its life,
flies if it can, but makes no resistance. And would Saul bring the flower of his
army into the field only to hunt one poor partridge? What a disparagement was
this to his honour! What a stain would it be on his memory to trample upon so
weak and patient as well as so innocent an enemy! James v. 6,
You have killed
the just, and he doth not resist you.
4. He desires that the core of the controversy may be searched
into and some proper method taken to bring it to an end, v. 19. Saul himself
could not say that justice put him on thus to persecute David, or that he was
obliged to do it for the public safety. David was not willing to say (though it
was very true) that Saul's own envy and malice put him on to do it; and
therefore he concludes it must be attributed either to the righteous judgment of
God or to the unrighteous designs of evil men. Now, (1.)
"If the Lord
have stirred thee up against me, either in displeasure to me (taking this
way to punish me for my sins against him, though, as to thee, I am guiltless) or
in displeasure to thee, if it be the effect of that evil spirit from the Lord
which troubles thee,
let him accept an offering from us bothlet us
join in making our peace with God, reconciling ourselves to him, which may be
done, by sacrifice; and then I hope the sin will be pardoned, whatever it is,
and the trouble, which is so great a vexation both to thee and me, will come to
an end." See the right method of peace-making; let us first make God our
friend by Christ the great Sacrifice, and then all other enmities shall be
slain, Eph. 2:16; Prov. 16:7. But, (2.) "If thou art incited to it by
wicked men, that incense thee against me,
cursed be they before the Lord,"
that is, they are very wicked people, and it is fit that they should be
abandoned as such, and excluded from the king's court and councils. He
decently lays the blame upon the evil counsellors who advised the king to that
which was dishonourable and dishonest, and insists upon it that they be removed
from about him and forbidden his presence, as men cursed before the Lord, and
then he hoped he should gain his petition, which is (v. 20),
"Let not my
blood fall to the earth, as thou threatenest, for it is
before the face
of the Lord, who will take cognizance of the wrong and avenge it." Thus
pathetically does David plead with Saul for his life, and, in order to that, for
his favourable opinion of him.
Verses 21-25
Here is, I. Saul's penitent confession of his fault and folly
in persecuting David and his promise to do so no more. This second instance of
David's respect to him wrought more upon him than the former, and extorted
from him better acknowledgements, v. 21. 1. He owns himself melted and quite
overcome by David's kindness to him:
"My soul was precious in thy eyes
this day, which, I thought, had been odious!" 2. He acknowledges he has
done very wrong to persecute him, that he has therein acted against God's law
(I
have sinned), and against his own interest
(I have played the fool),
in pursuing him as an enemy who would have been one of his best friends, if he
could but have thought so. "Herein (says he) I have
erred exceedingly,
and wronged both thee and myself." Note, Those that sin play the fool and
err exceedingly, those especially that hate and persecute God's people, Job
19:28. 3. He invites him to court again:
Return, my son David. Those that
have understanding will see it to be their interest to have those about them
that
behave themselves wisely, as David did, and have God with them. 4.
He promises him that he will not persecute him as he has done, but protect him:
I
will no more do thee harm. We have reason to think, according to the mind he
was now in, that he meant as he said, and yet neither his confession nor his
promise of amendment came from a principle of true repentance.
II. David's improvement of Saul's convictions and
confessions and the evidence he had to produce of his own sincerity. He desired
that one of the footmen might fetch the spear (v. 22), and then (v. 23), 1. He
appeals to God as judge of the controversy:
The Lord render to every man his
righteousness. David, by faith, is sure that he will do it because he
infallibly knows the true characters of all persons and actions and is
inflexibly just to render to every man according to his work, and, by prayer, he
desires he would do it. Herein he does, in effect, pray against Saul, who had
dealt unrighteously and unfaithfully with him
(Give them according to their
deeds, Ps. 28:4); but he principally intends it as a prayer for himself,
that God would protect him in his righteousness and faithfulness, and also
reward him, since Saul so ill requited him. 2. He reminds Saul again of the
proof he had now given of his respect to him from a principle of loyalty:
I
would not stretch forth my hand against the Lord's anointed, intimating to
Saul that the anointing oil was his protection, for which he was indebted to the
Lord and ought to express his gratitude to him (had he been a common person
David would not have been so tender of him), perhaps with this further
implication, that Saul knew, or had reason to think, David was the Lord's
anointed too, and therefore, by the same rule, Saul ought to be as tender of
David's life as David had been of his. 3. Not relying much upon Saul's
promises, he puts himself under God's protection and begs his favour (v. 24):
"Let
my life be much set by in the eyes of the Lord, how light soever thou makest
of it." Thus, for his kindness to Saul, he takes God to be his paymaster,
which those may with a holy confidence do that
do well and suffer for it.
III. Saul's prediction of David's advancement. He commends
him (v. 25):
Blessed be thou, my son David. So strong was the conviction
Saul was now under of David's honesty that he was not ashamed to condemn
himself and applaud David, even in the hearing of his own soldiers, who could
not but blush to think that they had come out so furiously against a man whom
their master, when he meets him, caresses thus. He foretels his victories, and
his elevation at last:
Thou shalt do great things. Note, Those who make
conscience of doing that which is truly good may come, by the divine assistance,
to do that which is truly great. He adds,
"Thou shalt also still
prevail, more and more," he means against himself, but is loth to speak
that out. The princely qualities which appeared in Davidhis generosity in
sparing Saul, his military authority in reprimanding Abner for sleeping, his
care of the public good, and the signal tokens of God's presence with himconvinced
Saul that he would certainly be advanced to the throne at last, according to the
prophecies concerning him.
Lastly, A palliative cure being thus made of the wound, they
parted friends. Saul returned to Gibeah
re infectâwithout accomplishing
his design, and ashamed of the expedition he had made; but David could not
take his word so far as to return with him. Those that have once been false are
not easily trusted another time. Therefore
David went on his way. And,
after this parting, it does not appear that ever Saul and David saw one another
again.
Chapter 26:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Ruth 2 Samuel
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
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