XV.
(1 Samuel 15:1) THE WAR WITH AMALEK. — Saul’s Disobedience to the
Will of God in the matter of Sparing the King and the Choicest of the
Plunder. — The Last Meeting in Life of Saul and Samuel. — The
Prophet reproaches the King. — Death of Agag at the hands of Samuel.
EXCURSUS G: ON THE CONDUCT... [ Continue Reading ]
(1 Samuel 15:1) SAMUEL ALSO SAID UNTO SAUL... — The compiler of the
history, selecting, no doubt, from ancient state records, chose to
illustrate the story of the reign and rejection of Saul by certain
memorable incidents as good examples of the king’s general life and
conduct. The incidents were al... [ Continue Reading ]
THAT WHICH AMALEK DID TO ISRAEL. — The Amalekites were a fierce,
untameable race of wanderers, who roamed at large through those
deserts which lie between Southern Judea and the Egyptian frontier.
They were descended from Esau’s grandson, Amalek. Not long after the
exodus from Egypt, they attacked a... [ Continue Reading ]
SMITE AMALEK, AND UTTERLY DESTROY... — For “utterly destroy” the
Hebrew has the far stronger expression, “put under the ban”
(_cherem_). Whatever was “put under the ban” in Israel was devoted
to God, and whatever was so devoted could not be redeemed, but must be
slain. Amalek was to be looked upon a... [ Continue Reading ]
IN TELAIM. — Identical with Telem (Joshua 15:24), a place on the
south border of Judah, near the region where the Amalekites chiefly
dwelt. — _Kimchi_ Telaim, however, signifies “lambs;” probably
“Beth,” house of, is to be understood. Thus it was no town, but
the “place or house of lambs” — some ope... [ Continue Reading ]
A CITY OF AMALEK. — Better rendered, _The city of Amalek_: no doubt,
their principal place of arms.
AND LAID WAIT IN THE VALLEY. — Better, in a torrent bed, then dry
(Arabic, “Wady”). There is a strange tradition in the Talmud that
Saul’s mind misgave him when he came to this “torrent bed;” thus
he... [ Continue Reading ]
AND SAUL SAID UNTO THE KENITES. — The Kenites, like the Amalekites,
were a nomad race of Arabs, but seem to have been ever friendly to the
Israelites. This kindly feeling sprang up soon after the departure
from Egypt, and was, no doubt, in the first instance owing to the fact
of Hobab, the father-in... [ Continue Reading ]
FROM HAVILAH UNTIL THOU COMEST TO SHUR. — The Havilah here alluded
to cannot be now identified. Shur, which signifies “wall,”
probably refers to the wall which crossed the north-east frontier of
Egypt, extending from Pelusium, past Migdol, to Hevo. Ebers suggests
that this wall gave to Egypt the nam... [ Continue Reading ]
AND HE TOOK AGAG... ALIVE. — Agag seems to have been for the
sovereigns of Amalek the official title, like Pharaoh in the case of
the kings of Egypt, and Abimelech among certain of the Philistine
peoples. The meaning of the term Agag is unknown.
UTTERLY DESTROYED ALL THE PEOPLE. — That is to say, I... [ Continue Reading ]
THEN CAME THE WORD... — Very likely in a dream.... [ Continue Reading ]
IT REPENTETH ME... — “God does not feel the pain of remorse (says
St. Augustine in Psalms 131), nor is He ever deceived, so as to desire
to correct anything in which He has erred. But as a man desires to
make a change when he repents, so when God is said in Scripture to
repent, we may expect a chang... [ Continue Reading ]
AND WHEN SAMUEL ROSE EARLY... — After the revelations of that sad
night, the prophet rose, and at once went to seek the guilty king. He
was told Saul was come to Carmel, identical with Kurmul in Judah, to
the south-east of Hebron; there the victorious monarch had erected a
monument of his victory, l... [ Continue Reading ]
BLESSED BE THOU OF THE LORD. — Saul must have been fully conscious
that he had failed to carry out the will and command of the Eternal
King of Israel. In the late war, undertaken for the definite and
solemn purpose of exterminating a wicked and bloodthirsty people,
whose continued existence worked t... [ Continue Reading ]
WHAT MEANETH THEN THIS BLEATING?... — “Saul is convicted of
falsehood by the voices of the animals which he has spared, contrary
to God’s command. Samuel’s mode of citing them against him by the
question, ‘What meaneth these voices?’ has an air of holy humour
and cutting irony.” — _Lange.
_... [ Continue Reading ]
THE PEOPLE SPARED THE BEST OF THE SHEEP... — At once the king
understood the drift of his old friend’s words; still more, perhaps,
the stern, sorrowful look of reproach which accompanied them, “Yes,
I understand your meaning. This bleating and lowing certainly does
come from the captured flocks and... [ Continue Reading ]
STAY, AND I WILL TELL THEE... — The king was probably turning away,
desirous of closing an interview which to him was full of bitterness,
when he was arrested
by the solemn words, and probably by the commanding gesture, of his
old friend and counsellor, who now addressed him with the majesty and
po... [ Continue Reading ]
WHEN THOU WAST LITTLE IN THINE OWN SIGHT. — Kimchi’s rendering of
the Hebrew here is singular: “Though thou seemest to thyself too
little and weak to curb the people, yet wast thou the head, and
shouldest have done thy duty;” but this, as Lange observes, would
imply that Samuel had _accepted_ Saul’s... [ Continue Reading ]
THE SINNERS THE AMALEKITES. — This briefly rehearses the charge of
the Most High, which Saul had deliberately disobeyed. It is noticeable
that the Amalekites are expressly called “sinners,” thus
indicating the reason of the Divine wrath against them. The men of
Sodom (Genesis 13:13) were styled “sin... [ Continue Reading ]
DIDST FLY UPON THE SPOIL. — The expression used evidently includes
the idea of greedy eagerness, as though Samuel detected a spirit of
grasping covetousness at the bottom of this disobedient act of
Saul’s.... [ Continue Reading ]
YEA, I HAVE OBEYED... — These and the words which follow are simply
a repetition of the king’s former excuse for his act: but they show
us what was the state of Saul’s mind: he evidently disbelieved in
the power of the Eternal as a heart reader. If he could justify
himself before Samuel, that was al... [ Continue Reading ]
BEHOLD, TO OBEY IS BETTER THAN SACRIFICE. — In this answer it would
seem that the Spirit of the Lord descended upon Samuel, and that he
here gave utterance to one of those rapt expressions which now and
again in the course of each of these Hebrew prophets’ lives these
famous men were commissioned by... [ Continue Reading ]
FOR REBELLION IS AS THE SIN OF WITCHCRAFT. — Witchcraft, more
literally _soothsaying_ or _divination,_ was a sin constantly held up
to reprobation in the Old Testament. It was the greatest of all the
dangers to which Israel was exposed, and was in fact a tampering with
the idol-worship of the surrou... [ Continue Reading ]
I HAVE SINNED. — The grave condemnation of the prophet appalled the
king. The grounds of the Divine rejection evidently sank deep into
Saul’s heart. Such a thought as that, in the eyes of the Invisible
and Eternal, he ranked with the idolators and heathen sinners around,
was, even for one sunk so lo... [ Continue Reading ]
NOW THEREFORE, I PRAY THEE, PARDON MY SIN. — But, after all, the
sorrow of Saul was rather for the immediate earthly consequence which
he feared might follow the Divine rejection. He foresaw his power in
Israel would sensibly decrease, so he intreats the great prophet not
to desert him.... [ Continue Reading ]
I WILL NOT RETURN WITH THEE. — Samuel too clearly sees what are the
true springs of Saul’s repentance, and refuses at first. It was
only, as C. a Lapide forcibly urges, a fear on the part of the king,
of losing the kingdom and of incurring public disgrace. The prophet
for reply again repeats the ter... [ Continue Reading ]
HE LAID HOLD UPON THE SKIRT OF HIS MANTLE. — The king’s passionate
action indicates a restless, unquiet mind. Not content with intreating
words, Saul, perhaps even with some violence, lays hold of the old man
as he turns away, to detain him. What Saul laid hold of and tore was
not the “mantle” (Auth... [ Continue Reading ]
THE LORD HATH RENT THE KINGDOM. — The prophet at once looks upon the
garment torn by the passionate vehemence of the king, as an omen for
the future, and uses the rent vesture as a symbol, to show Saul that
thus had the Lord on that day rent the kingdom from him.
A NEIGHBOUR OF THINE. — It had not... [ Continue Reading ]
THE STRENGTH OF ISRAEL WILL NOT LIE. — This title of the Eternal,
here rendered “the Strength of Israel,” would be better rendered
_the Changeless One of Israel._ The Hebrew word is first found in this
passage. In later Hebrew, as in 1 Chronicles 29:2, it is rendered
“glory,” from the Aramaean usage... [ Continue Reading ]
YET HONOUR ME NOW, I PRAY THEE, BEFORE THE ELDERS. — It was a
strange penitence, after all, this sorrow of Saul for his great sin.
He was, no doubt, terribly in earnest and in great fear; but his
earnestness was based upon a desire to maintain his power and royal
state, and his fear sprang from a we... [ Continue Reading ]
SO SAMUEL TURNED AGAIN AFTER SAUL. — The prophet, after the repeated
and pressing request of the king, consents publicly to worship the
Lord in his company. There is little doubt but that the principal
motive which induced Samuel on this occasion not to withdraw himself
from the public thanksgiving... [ Continue Reading ]
BRING YE HITHER TO ME AGAG THE KING OF THE AMALEKITES. — But in the
public service of thanksgiving there was one stern act of judgment
still to be done. The King of the Amalekites had been sentenced to
die. Saul had spared him for selfish reasons of his own; we need not
discuss here the apparent har... [ Continue Reading ]
SAMUEL HEWED AGAG IN PIECES. — It has been suggested, with some
probability, that these words refer to a peculiar form of putting to
death, like the quartering in vogue during the Middle Ages.... [ Continue Reading ]
CAME NO MORE TO SEE SAUL... — Once more the old friends met together
_in life_ (see 1 Samuel 19:24), but the interview on this occasion was
not of Samuel’s seeking; nor does it appear then that any
communication passed between them. When next the seer and the king
_spoke_ together, the seer belonged... [ Continue Reading ]