“But their swords will pierce their own hearts,
and their bows will be broken.”
To his credit, Saul didn’t want the job. In fact, he even hid when chosen. He was a local farmer, a head taller than
most people, remarkably handsome. But he
wanted no part of being
What’s more, he changed his mind only because Israel
faced a crisis. No one bribed him; he
took the job to which he was divinely appointed only because his people needed
him. Nabash the Ammonite, threatening the city of
To counter, Saul played a card from a similar deck. He hacked up his oxen, and his men delivered
the chunks to the people of Israel, telling them that unless they acted all
their livestock would meet a similar fate. Soon enough, he had an army. Soon
enough the city of
It didn’t take long for his reign to spiral into
disobedience and decay, and the cause was understandable: he began to trust himself more than the Lord.
Excuse my saying it, but that’s well, to be expected of most all of us.
Specifically, when he saw his army dissipate before
battle with the Philistines, he took upon himself the task of religious
sacrifice, thereby disobeying God, who had commanded that only Samuel, his
anointed prophet, could undertake the ritual sacrifice.
Samuel was furious. He told the King that God would replace him
with someone God himself would choose, a man, Samuel told him, who had a heart like
God’s own.
Not long after, King Saul won an impressive victory over
the Amalekites, but rather than destroy the entire army as God had commanded,
Saul took their King, Agag, alive, a kind of trophy. Likewise, his soldiers kept Amalekite
livestock, such plunder traditionally a conquering army’s wages. But both acts were disobedient.
Samuel grieved deeply over Saul’s flagrant arrogance, and
God commanded his prophet to anoint another king. Enter David, a 16-year-old shepherd boy with
no military experience, little gravitas, and absolutely no name recognition.
After a miraculous one-on-one defeat of the giant
Goliath however, David needed no one to market his importance. Soon he was the champion of the masses, a
fact that did not go unnoticed by the still reigning King. King Saul grew frightfully paranoid about the
would-be king, even mad. Several times,
he tried to kill him. Amazingly, David
stayed loyal. The King no longer ruled
but was ruled by a fanatical obsession to kill the boy who’d never been
disloyal.
With the nation in disarray, the Philistines mounted
another assault, and Saul, seeing defeat, killed himself rather than suffer the
humiliation of capture and torture—he
purposefully fell on his sword.
The moral lesson of all of this could hardly be missed by the shepherd boy, Saul’s reluctant successor, a man after God’s own heart. Is the story of King Saul the precise
derivation of this line from the song of Psalm 37? It seems impossible not to believe that it couldn’t be.
But the reason it’s here is assurance—ours. In the long run, the wicked, whoever they might be, won’t prosper. That’s the simple truth David wants to offer for our comfort. He knew—perhaps like no one else—how true it was and is.
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