<p><SPAN name="link62HCH0014" id="link62HCH0014">
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<h3> CHAPTER 14. Now Saul Upon God's Not Answering Him Concerning The Fight With The Philistines Desired A Necromantic Woman To Raise Up The Soul Of Samuel To Him; And How He Died, With His Sons Upon The Overthrow Of The Hebrews In Battle. </h3>
<p>1. About the same time the Philistines resolved to make war against the
Israelites, and sent to all their confederates that they would go along
with them to the war to Reggan, [near the city Shunem,] whence they might
gather themselves together, and suddenly attack the Hebrews. Then did
Achish, the king of Gath, desire David to assist them with his armed men
against the Hebrews. This he readily promised; and said that the time was
now come wherein he might requite him for his kindness and hospitality. So
the king promised to make him the keeper of his body, after the victory,
supposing that the battle with the enemy succeeded to their mind; which
promise of honor and confidence he made on purpose to increase his zeal
for his service.</p>
<p>2. Now Saul, the king of the Hebrews, had cast out of the country the
fortune-tellers, and the necromancers, and all such as exercised the like
arts, excepting the prophets. But when he heard that the Philistines were
already come, and had pitched their camp near the city Shunem, situate in
the plain, he made haste to oppose them with his forces; and when he was
come to a certain mountain called Gilboa, he pitched his camp over-against
the enemy; but when he saw the enemy's army he was greatly troubled,
because it appeared to him to be numerous, and superior to his own; and he
inquired of God by the prophets concerning the battle, that he might know
beforehand what would be the event of it. And when God did not answer him,
Saul was under a still greater dread, and his courage fell, foreseeing, as
was but reasonable to suppose, that mischief would befall him, now God was
not there to assist him; yet did he bid his servants to inquire out for
him some woman that was a necromancer and called up the souls of the dead,
that So he might know whether his affairs would succeed to his mind; for
this sort of necromantic women that bring up the souls of the dead, do by
them foretell future events to such as desire them. And one of his
servants told him that there was such a woman in the city Endor, but was
known to nobody in the camp; hereupon Saul put off his royal apparel, and
took two of those his servants with him, whom he knew to be most faithful
to him, and came to Endor to the woman, and entreated her to act the part
of a fortune-teller, and to bring up such a soul to him as he should name
to her. But when the woman opposed his motion, and said she did not
despise the king, who had banished this sort of fortune- tellers, and that
he did not do well himself, when she had done him no harm, to endeavor to
lay a snare for her, and to discover that she exercised a forbidden art,
in order to procure her to be punished, he sware that nobody should know
what she did; and that he would not tell any one else what she foretold,
but that she should incur no danger. As soon as he had induced her by this
oath to fear no harm, he bid her bring up to him the soul of Samuel. She,
not knowing who Samuel was, called him out of Hades. When he appeared, and
the woman saw one that was venerable, and of a divine form, she was in
disorder; and being astonished at the sight, she said, "Art not thou king
Saul?" for Samuel had informed her who he was. When he had owned that to
be true, and had asked her whence her disorder arose, she said that she
saw a certain person ascend, who in his form was like to a god. And when
he bid her tell him what he resembled, in what habit he appeared, and of
what age he was, she told him he was an old man already, and of a glorious
personage, and had on a sacerdotal mantle. So the king discovered by these
signs that he was Samuel; and he fell down upon the ground, and saluted
and worshipped him. And when the soul of Samuel asked him why he had
disturbed him, and caused him to be brought up, he lamented the necessity
he was under; for he said, that his enemies pressed heavily upon him; that
he was in distress what to do in his present circumstances; that he was
forsaken of God, and could obtain no prediction of what was coming,
neither by prophets nor by dreams; and that "these were the reasons why I
have recourse to time, who always took great care of me." But <SPAN href="#link6note-27" name="link6noteref-27" id="link6noteref-27"><small>27</small></SPAN>
Samuel, seeing that the end of Saul's life was come, said, "It is in vain
for thee to desire to learn of me any thing future, when God hath forsaken
thee: however, hear what I say, that David is to be king, and to finish
this war with good success; and thou art to lose thy dominion and thy
life, because thou didst not obey God in the war with the Amalekites, and
hast not kept his commandments, as I foretold thee while I was alive.
Know, therefore, that the people shall be made subject to their enemies,
and that thou, with thy sons, shall fall in the battle tomorrow, and thou
shalt then be with me [in Hades]."</p>
<p>3. When Saul heard this, he could not speak for grief, and fell down on
the floor, whether it were from the sorrow that arose upon what Samuel had
said, or from his emptiness, for he had taken no food the foregoing day
nor night, he easily fell quite down: and when with difficulty he had
recovered himself, the woman would force him to eat, begging this of him
as a favor on account of her concern in that dangerous instance of
fortune-telling, which it was not lawful for her to have done, because of
the fear she was under of the king, while she knew not who he was, yet did
she undertake it, and go through with it; on which account she entreated
him to admit that a table and food might be set before him, that he might
recover his strength, and so get safe to his own camp. And when he opposed
her motion, and entirely rejected it, by reason of his anxiety, she forced
him, and at last persuaded him to it. Now she had one calf that she was
very fond of, and one that she took a great deal of care of, and fed it
herself; for she was a woman that got her living by the labor of her own
hands, and had no other possession but that one calf; this she killed, and
made ready its flesh, and set it before his servants and himself. So Saul
came to the camp while it was yet night.</p>
<p>4. Now it is but just to recommend the generosity of this woman, <SPAN href="#link6note-28" name="link6noteref-28" id="link6noteref-28"><small>28</small></SPAN>
because when the king had forbidden her to use that art whence her
circumstances were bettered and improved, and when she had never seen the
king before, she still did not remember to his disadvantage that he had
condemned her sort of learning, and did not refuse him as a stranger, and
one that she had had no acquaintance with; but she had compassion upon
him, and comforted him, and exhorted him to do what he was greatly averse
to, and offered him the only creature she had, as a poor woman, and that
earnestly, and with great humanity, while she had no requital made her for
her kindness, nor hunted after any future favor from him, for she knew he
was to die; whereas men are naturally either ambitious to please those
that bestow benefits upon them, or are very ready to serve those from whom
they may receive some advantage. It would be well therefore to imitate the
example and to do kindnesses to all such as are in want and to think that
nothing is better, nor more becoming mankind, than such a general
beneficence, nor what will sooner render God favorable, and ready to
bestow good things upon us. And so far may suffice to have spoken
concerning this woman. But I shall speak further upon another subject,
which will afford me all opportunity of discoursing on what is for the
advantage of cities, and people, and nations, and suited to the taste of
good men, and will encourage them all in the prosecution of virtue; and is
capable of showing them the of acquiring glory, and an everlasting fame;
and of imprinting in the kings of nations, and the rulers of cities, great
inclination and diligence of doing well; as also of encouraging them to
undergo dangers, and to die for their countries, and of instructing them
how to despise all the most terrible adversities: and I have a fair
occasion offered me to enter on such a discourse by Saul the king of the
Hebrews; for although he knew what was coming upon him, and that he was to
die immediately, by the prediction of the prophet, he did not resolve to
fly from death, nor so far to indulge the love of life as to betray his
own people to the enemy, or to bring a disgrace on his royal dignity; but
exposing himself, as well as all his family and children, to dangers, he
thought it a brave thing to fall together with them, as he was fighting
for his subjects, and that it was better his sons should die thus, showing
their courage, than to leave them to their uncertain conduct afterward,
while, instead of succession and posterity, they gained commendation and a
lasting name. Such a one alone seems to me to be a just, a courageous, and
a prudent man; and when any one has arrived at these dispositions, or
shall hereafter arrive at them, he is the man that ought to be by all
honored with the testimony of a virtuous or courageous man: for as to
those that go out to war with hopes of success, and that they shall return
safe, supposing they should have performed some glorious action, I think
those do not do well who call these valiant men, as so many historians and
other writers who treat of them are wont to do, although I confess those
do justly deserve some commendation also; but those only may be styled
courageous and bold in great undertakings, and despisers of adversities,
who imitate Saul: for as for those that do not know what the event of war
will be as to themselves, and though they do not faint in it, but deliver
themselves up to uncertain futurity, and are tossed this way and that way,
this is not so very eminent an instance of a generous mind, although they
happen to perform many great exploits; but when men's minds expect no good
event, but they know beforehand they must die, and that they must undergo
that death in the battle also, after this neither to be aftrighted, nor to
be astonished at the terrible fate that is coming, but to go directly upon
it, when they know it beforehand, this it is that I esteem the character
of a man truly courageous. Accordingly this Saul did, and thereby
demonstrated that all men who desire fame after they are dead are so to
act as they may obtain the same: this especially concerns kings, who ought
not to think it enough in their high stations that they are not wicked in
the government of their subjects, but to be no more than moderately good
to them. I could say more than this about Saul and his courage, the
subject affording matter sufficient; but that I may not appear to run out
improperly in his commendation, I return again to that history from which
I made this digression.</p>
<p>5. Now when the Philistines, as I said before, had pitched their camp, and
had taken an account of their forces, according to their nations, and
kingdoms, and governments, king Achish came last of all with his own army;
after whom came David with his six hundred armed men. And when the
commanders of the Philistines saw him, they asked the king whence these
Hebrews came, and at whose invitation. He answered that it was David, who
was fled away from his master Saul, and that he had entertained him when
he came to him, and that now he was willing to make him this requital for
his favors, and to avenge himself upon Saul, and so was become his
confederate. The commanders complained of this, that he had taken him for
a confederate who was an enemy; and gave him counsel to send him away,
lest he should unawares do his friends a great deal of mischief by
entertaining him, for that he afforded him an opportunity of being
reconciled to his master by doing a mischief to our army. They thereupon
desired him, out of a prudent foresight of this, to send him away, with
his six hundred armed men, to the place he had given him for his
habitation; for that this was that David whom the virgins celebrated in
their hymns, as having destroyed many ten thousands of the Philistines.
When the king of Gath heard this, he thought they spake well; so he called
David, and said to him, "As for myself, I can bear witness that thou hast
shown great diligence and kindness about me, and on that account it was
that I took thee for my confederate; however, what I have done does not
please the commanders of the Philistines; go therefore within a day's time
to the place I have given thee, without suspecting any harm, and there
keep my country, lest any of our enemies should make an incursion upon it,
which will be one part of that assistance which I expect from thee." So
David came to Ziklag, as the king of Gath bade him; but it happened, that
while he was gone to the assistance of the Philistines, the Amalekites had
made an incursion, and taken Ziklag before, and had burnt it; and when
they had taken a great deal of other prey out of that place, and out of
the other parts of the Philistines' country, they departed.</p>
<p>6. Now when David found that Ziklag was laid waste, and that it was all
spoiled, and that as well his own wives, who were two, as the wives of his
companions, with their children, were made captives, he presently rent his
clothes, weeping and lamenting, together with his friends; and indeed he
was so cast down with these misfortunes, that at length tears themselves
failed him. He was also in danger of being stoned to death by his
companions, who were greatly afflicted at the captivity of their wives and
children, for they laid the blame upon him of what had happened. But when
he had recovered himself out of his grief, and had raised up his mind to
God, he desired the high priest Abiathar to put on his sacerdotal
garments, and to inquire of God, and to prophesy to him, whether God would
grant; that if he pursued after the Amalekites, he should overtake them,
and save their wives and their children, and avenge himself on the
enemies. And when the high priest bade him to pursue after them, he
marched apace, with his four hundred men, after the enemy; and when he was
come to a certain brook called Besor, and had lighted upon one that was
wandering about, an Egyptian by birth, who was almost dead with want and
famine, [for he had continued wandering about without food in the
wilderness three days,] he first of all gave him sustenance, both meat and
drink, and thereby refreshed him. He then asked him to whom he belonged,
and whence he came. Whereupon the man told him he was an Egyptian by
birth, and was left behind by his master, because he was so sick and weak
that he could not follow him. He also informed him that he was one of
those who had burnt and plundered, not only other parts of Judea, but
Ziklag itself also. So David made use of him as a guide to find oat the
Amalekites; and when he had overtaken them, as they lay scattered about on
the ground, some at dinner, some disordered, and entirely drunk with wine,
and in the fruition of their spoils and their prey, he fell upon them on
the sudden, and made a great slaughter among them; for they were naked,
and expected no such thing, but had betaken themselves to drinking and
feasting; and so they were all easily destroyed. Now some of them that
were overtaken as they lay at the table were slain in that posture, and
their blood brought up with it their meat and their drink. They slew
others of them as they were drinking to one another in their cups, and
some of them when their full bellies had made them fall asleep; and for so
many as had time to put on their armor, they slew them with the sword,
with no less case than they did those that were naked; and for the
partisans of David, they continued also the slaughter from the first hour
of the day to the evening, so that there were, not above four hundred of
the Amalekites left; and they only escaped by getting upon their
dromedaries and camels. Accordingly David recovered not only all the other
spoils which the enemy had carried away, but his wives also, and the wives
of his companions. But when they were come to the place where they had
left the two hundred men, which were not able to follow them, but were
left to take care of the stuff, the four hundred men did not think fit to
divide among them any other parts of what they had gotten, or of the prey,
since they did not accompany them, but pretended to be feeble, and did not
follow them in pursuit of the enemy, but said they should be contented to
have safely recovered their wives; yet did David pronounce that this
opinion of theirs was evil and unjust, and that when God had granted them
such a favor, that they had avenged themselves on their enemies, and had
recovered all that belonged to themselves, they should make an equal
distribution of what they had gotten to all, because the rest had tarried
behind to guard their stuff; and from that time this law obtained among
them, that those who guarded the stuff, should receive an equal share with
those that fought in the battle. Now when David was come to Ziklag, he
sent portions of the spoils to all that had been familiar with him, and to
his friends in the tribe of Judah. And thus ended the affairs of the
plundering of Ziklag, and of the slaughter of the Amalekites.</p>
<p>7. Now upon the Philistines joining battle, there followed a sharp
engagement, and the Philistine, became the conquerors, and slew a great
number of their enemies; but Saul the king of Israel, and his sons, fought
courageously, and with the utmost alacrity, as knowing that their entire
glory lay in nothing else but dying honorably, and exposing themselves to
the utmost danger from the enemy [for they had nothing else to hope for];
so they brought upon themselves the whole power of the enemy, till they
were encompassed round and slain, but not before they had killed many of
the Philistines Now the sons of Saul were Jonathan, and Abinadab, and
Malchisua; and when these were slain the multitude of the Hebrews were put
to flight, and all was disorder, and confusion, and slaughter, upon the
Philistines pressing in upon them. But Saul himself fled, having a strong
body of soldiers about him; and upon the Philistines sending after them
those that threw javelins and shot arrows, he lost all his company except
a few. As for himself, he fought with great bravery; and when he had
received so many wounds, that he was not able to bear up nor to oppose any
longer, and yet was not able to kill himself, he bade his armor-bearer
draw his sword, and run him through, before the enemy should take him
alive. But his armor-bearer not daring to kill his master, he drew his own
sword, and placing himself over against its point, he threw himself upon
it; and when he could neither run it through him, nor, by leaning against
it, make the sword pass through him, he turned him round, and asked a
certain young man that stood by who he was; and when he understood that he
was an Amalekite, he desired him to force the sword through him, because
he was not able to do it with his own hands, and thereby to procure him
such a death as he desired. This the young man did accordingly; and he
took the golden bracelet that was on Saul's arm, and his royal crown that
was on his head, and ran away. And when Saul's armor-bearer saw that he
was slain, he killed himself; nor did any of the king's guards escape, but
they all fell upon the mountain called Gilboa. But when those Hebrews that
dwelt in the valley beyond Jordan, and those who had their cities in the
plain, heard that Saul and his sons were fallen, and that the multitude
about them were destroyed, they left their own cities, and fled to such as
were the best fortified and fenced; and the Philistines, finding those
cities deserted, came and dwelt in them.</p>
<p>8. On the next day, when the Philistines came to strip their enemies that
were slain, they got the bodies of Saul and of his sons, and stripped
them, and cut off their heads; and they sent messengers all about their
country, to acquaint them that their enemies were fallen; and they
dedicated their armor in the temple of Astarte, but hung their bodies on
crosses at the walls of the city Bethshun, which is now called
Scythepolls. But when the inhabitants of Jabesh-Gilead heard that they had
dismembered the dead bodies of Saul and of his sons, they deemed it so
horrid a thing to overlook this barbarity, and to suffer them to be
without funeral rites, that the most courageous and hardy among them [and
indeed that city had in it men that were very stout both in body and mind]
journeyed all night, and came to Bethshun, and approached to the enemy's
wall, and taking down the bodies of Saul and of his sons, they carried
them to Jabesh, while the enemy were not able enough nor bold enough to
hinder them, because of their great courage. So the people of Jabesh wept
all in general, and buried their bodies in the best place of their
country, which was named Areurn; and they observed a public mourning for
them seven days, with their wives and children, beating their breasts, and
lamenting the king and his sons, without either tasting meat or drink <SPAN href="#link6note-29" name="link6noteref-29" id="link6noteref-29"><small>29</small></SPAN>
[till the evening.]</p>
<p>9. To this his end did Saul come, according to the prophecy of Samuel,
because he disobeyed the commands of God about the Amalekites, and on the
account of his destroying the family of Ahimelech the high priest, with
Ahimelech himself, and the city of the high priests. Now Saul, when he had
reigned eighteen years while Samuel was alive, and after his death two
[and twenty], ended his life in this manner.</p>
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<h3> FOOTNOTES: </h3>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-1" id="link6note-1">
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<p class="foot">
1 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-1">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Dagon, a famous maritime
god or idol, is generally supposed to have been like a man above the
navel, and like a fish beneath it.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-2" id="link6note-2">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
2 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-2">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Spanheim informs us here,
that upon the coins of Tenedos, and those of other cities, a field-mouse
is engraven, together with Apollo Smintheus, or Apollo, the driver away of
field-mice, on account of his being supposed to have freed certain tracts
of ground from those mice; which coins show how great a judgment such mice
have sometimes been, and how the deliverance from them was then esteemed
the effect of a divine power; which observations are highly suitable to
this history.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-3" id="link6note-3">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
3 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-3">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This device of the
Philistines, of having a yoke of kine to draw this cart, into which they
put the ark of the Hebrews, is greatly illustrated by Sanchoniatho's
account, under his ninth generation, that Agrouerus, or Agrotes, the
husbandman, had a much-worshipped statue and temple, carried about by one
or more yoke of oxen, or kine, in Phoenicia, in the neighborhood of these
Philistines. See Cumberland's Sanchoniatho, p. 27 and 247; and Essay on
the Old Testament, Append. p. 172.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-4" id="link6note-4">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
4 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-4">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ These seventy men, being
not so much as Levites, touched the ark in a rash or profane manner, and
were slain by the hand of God for such their rashness and profaneness,
according to the Divine threatenings, Numbers 4:15, 20; but how other
copies come to add such an incredible number as fifty thousand in this one
town, or small city, I know not. See Dr. Wall's Critical Notes on 1 Samuel
6:19.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-5" id="link6note-5">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
5 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-5">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This is the first place,
so far as I remember, in these Antiquities, where Josephus begins to call
his nation Jews, he having hitherto usually, if not constantly, called
them either Hebrews or Israelites. The second place soon follows; see also
ch. 3. sect. 5.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-6" id="link6note-6">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
6 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-6">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Of this great mistake of
Saul and his servant, as if true prophet of God would accept of a gift or
present, for foretelling what was desired of him, see the note on B. IV.
ch. 6. sect. 3.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-7" id="link6note-7">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
7 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-7">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ It seems to me not
improbable that these seventy guests of Samuel, as here, with himself at
the head of them, were a Jewish sanhedrim, and that hereby Samuel
intimated to Saul that these seventy-one were to be his constant
counselors, and that he was to act not like a sole monarch, but with the
advice and direction of these seventy-one members of that Jewish sanhedrim
upon all occasions, which yet we never read that he consulted afterward.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-8" id="link6note-8">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
8 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-8">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ An instance of this Divine
fury we have after this in Saul, ch. 5. sect. 2, 3; 1 Samuel 11:6. See the
like, Judges 3:10; 6:34; 11:29; 13:25; and 14:6.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-9" id="link6note-9">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
9 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-9">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Take here Theodoret's
note, cited by Dr. Hudson:—"He that exposes his shield to the enemy
with his left hand, thereby hides his left eye, and looks at the enemy
with his right eye: he therefore that plucks out that eye, makes men
useless in war."]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-10" id="link6note-10">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
10 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-10">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Mr. Reland observes
here, and proves elsewhere in his note on Antiq. B. III. ch. 1. sect. 6,
that although thunder and lightning with us usually happen in summer, yet
in Palestine and Syria they are chiefly confined to winter. Josephus takes
notice of the same thing again, War, B. IV. ch. 4. sect. 5.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-11" id="link6note-11">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
11 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-11">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Saul seems to have staid
till near the time of the evening sacrifice, on the seventh day, which
Samuel the prophet of God had appointed him, but not till the end of that
day, as he ought to have done; and Samuel appears, by delaying to come to
the full time of the evening sacrifice on that seventh day, to have tried
him [who seems to have been already for some time declining from his
strict and bounden subordination to God and his prophet; to have taken
life-guards for himself and his son, which was entirely a new thing in
Israel, and savored of a distrust of God's providence; and to have
affected more than he ought that independent authority which the pagan
kings took to themselves]; Samuel, I say, seems to have here tried Saul
whether he would stay till the priest came, who alone could lawfully offer
the sacrifices, nor would boldly and profanely usurp the priest's office,
which he venturing upon, was justly rejected for his profaneness. See
Apost. Constit. B. II. ch. 27. And, indeed, since Saul had accepted kingly
power, which naturally becomes ungovernable and tyrannical, as God
foretold, and the experience of all ages has shown, the Divine settlement
by Moses had soon been laid aside under the kings, had not God, by keeping
strictly to his laws, and severely executing the threatenings therein
contained, restrained Saul and other kings in some degree of obedience to
himself; nor was even this severity sufficient to restrain most of the
future kings of Israel and Judah from the grossest idolatry and impiety.
Of the advantage of which strictness, in the observing Divine laws, and
inflicting their threatened penalties, see Antiq. B. VI. ch. 12. sect. 7;
and Against Apion, B. II. sect. 30, where Josephus speaks of that matter;
though it must be noted that it seems, at least in three instances, that
good men did not always immediately approve of such Divine severity. There
seems to be one instance, 1 Samuel 6:19, 20; another, 1 Samuel 15:11; and
a third, 2 Samuel 6:8, 9; Antiq. B. VI. ch. 7. sect. 2; though they all at
last acquiesced in the Divine conduct, as knowing that God is wiser than
men.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-12" id="link6note-12">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
12 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-12">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ By this answer of
Samuel, and that from a Divine commission, which is fuller in l Samuel
13:14, and by that parallel note in the Apostolical Constitutions just now
quoted, concerning the great wickedness of Saul in venturing, even under a
seeming necessity of affairs, to usurp the priest's office, and offer
sacrifice without the priest, we are in some degree able to answer that
question, which I have ever thought a very hard one, viz. Whether, if
there were a city or country of lay Christians without any clergymen, it
were lawful for the laity alone to baptize, or celebrate the eucharist,
etc., or indeed whether they alone could ordain themselves either bishops,
priests, or deacons, for the due performance of such sacerdotal
ministrations; or whether they ought not rather, till they procure
clergymen to come among them, to confine themselves within those bounds of
piety and Christianity which belong alone to the laity; such particularly
as are recommended in the first book of the Apostolical Constitutions,
which peculiarly concern the laity, and are intimated in Clement's
undoubted epistle, sect. 40. To which latter opinion I incline.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-13" id="link6note-13">
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<p class="foot">
13 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-13">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This rash vow or curse
of Saul, which Josephus says was confirmed by the people, and yet not
executed, I suppose principally because Jonathan did not know of it, is
very remarkable; it being of the essence of the obligation of all laws,
that they be sufficiently known and promulgated, otherwise the conduct of
Providence, as to the sacredness of solemn oaths and vows, in God's
refusing to answer by Urim till this breach of Saul's vow or curse was
understood and set right, and God propitiated by public prayer, is here
very remarkable, as indeed it is every where else in the Old Testament.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-14" id="link6note-14">
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<p class="foot">
14 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-14">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Here we have still more
indications of Saul's affectation of despotic power, and of his
entrenching upon the priesthood, and making and endeavoring to execute a
rash vow or curse, without consulting Samuel or the sanhedrim. In this
view it is also that I look upon this erection of a new altar by Saul, and
his offering of burnt-offerings himself upon it, and not as any proper
instance of devotion or religion, with other commentators.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-15" id="link6note-15">
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<p class="foot">
15 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-15">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The reason of this
severity is distinctly given, 1 Samuel 15:18, "Go and utterly destroy the
sinners the Amalekites:" nor indeed do we ever meet with these Amalekites
but as very cruel and bloody people, and particularly seeking to injure
and utterly to destroy the nation of Israel. See Exodus 17:8-16; Numbers
14:45; Deuteronomy 25:17-19; Judges 6:3, 6; 1 Samuel 15:33; Psalms 83:7;
and, above all, the most barbarous of all cruelties, that of Haman the
Agagite, or one of the posterity of Agag, the old king of the Amalekites,
Esther 3:1-15.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-16" id="link6note-16">
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<p class="foot">
16 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-16">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Spanheim takes notice
here that the Greeks had such singers of hymns; and that usually children
or youths were picked out for that service; as also, that those called
singers to the harp, did the same that David did here, i.e. join their own
vocal and instrumental music together.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-17" id="link6note-17">
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<p class="foot">
17 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-17">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Josephus says thrice in
this chapter, and twice afterwards, ch. 11. sect. 2, and B. VII. ch. 1.
sect. 4, i.e. five times in all, that Saul required not a bare hundred of
the foreskins of the Philistines, but six hundred of their heads. The
Septuagint have 100 foreskins, but the Syriac and Arabic 200. Now that
these were not foreskins, with our other copies, but heads, with
Josephus's copy, seems somewhat probable, from 1 Samuel 29:4, where all
copies say that it was with the heads of such Philistines that David might
reconcile himself to his master, Saul.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-18" id="link6note-18">
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<p class="foot">
18 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-18">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Since the modern Jews
have lost the signification of the Hebrew word here used, cebr; and since
the LXX., as well as Josephus, reader it the liver of the goat, and since
this rendering, and Josephus's account, are here so much more clear and
probable than those of others, it is almost unaccountable that our
commentators should so much as hesitate about its true interpretation.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-19" id="link6note-19">
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<p class="foot">
19 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-19">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ These violent and wild
agitations of Saul seem to me to have been no other than demoniacal; and
that the same demon which used to seize him, since he was forsaken of God,
and which the divine hymns and psalms which were sung to the harp by David
used to expel, was now in a judicial way brought upon him, not only in
order to disappoint his intentions against innocent David, but to expose
him to the laughter and contempt of all that saw him, or heard of those
agitations; such violent and wild agitations being never observed in true
prophets, when they were under the inspiration of the Spirit of God. Our
other copies, which say the Spirit of God came him, seem not so here copy,
which mentions nothing of God at all. Nor does Josephus seem to ascribe
this impulse and ecstasy of Saul to any other than to his old demoniacal
spirit, which on all accounts appears the most probable. Nor does the
former description of Saul's real inspiration by the Divine Spirit, 1
Samuel 10:9- 12; Antiq. B. VI. ch. 4. sect. 2, which was before he was
become wicked, well agree with the descriptions before us.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-20" id="link6note-20">
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<p class="foot">
20 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-20">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ What is meant by Saul's
lying down naked all that day, and all that night, 1 Samuel 19:4, and
whether any more than laying aside his royal apparel, or upper garments,
as Josephus seems to understand it, is by no means certain. See the note
on Antiq. B. VIII. ch. 14. sect. 2.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-21" id="link6note-21">
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<p class="foot">
21 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-21">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This city Nob was not a
city allotted to the priests, nor had the prophets, that we know of, any
particular cities allotted them. It seems the tabernacle was now at Nob,
and probably a school of the prophets was here also. It was full two days'
journey on foot from Jerusalem, 1 Samuel 21:5. The number of priests here
slain in Josephus is three hundred and eighty-five, and but eighty-five in
our Hebrew copies; yet are they three hundred and five in the Septuagint.
I prefer Josephus's number, the Hebrew having, I suppose, only dropped the
hundreds, the other the tens. This city Nob seems to have been the chief,
or perhaps the only seat of the family of Ithamar, which here perished,
according to God's former terrible threatenings to Eli, 1 Samuel 2:27-36;
3:11-18. See ch. 14. sect. D, hereafter.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-22" id="link6note-22">
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<p class="foot">
22 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-22">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This section contains an
admirable reflection of Josephus concerning the general wickedness of men
in great authority, and the danger they are in of rejecting that regard to
justice and humanity, to Divine Providence and the fear of God, which they
either really had, or pretended to have, while they were in a lower
condition. It can never be too often perused by kings and great men, nor
by those who expect to obtain such elevated dignities among mankind. See
the like reflections of our Josephus, Antiq. B. VII. ch. 1. sect. 5, at
the end; and B. VIII. ch. 10. sect. 2, at the beginning. They are to the
like purport with one branch of Agur's prayer: "One thing have I required
of thee, deny it me not before I die: Give me not riches, lest I be full,
and deny thee, and say, Who is the Lord?" Proverbs 30:7-9.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-23" id="link6note-23">
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<p class="foot">
23 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-23">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The phrase in David's
speech to Saul, as set down in Josephus, that he had abstained from just
revenge, puts me in mind of the like words in the Apostolical
Constitutions, B. VII. ch. 2., "That revenge is not evil, but that
patience is more honorable."]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-24" id="link6note-24">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
24 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-24">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The number of men that
came first to David, are distinctly in Josephus, and in our common copies,
but four hundred. When he was at Keilah still but four hundred, both in
Josephus and in the LXXX.; but six hundred in our Hebrew copies, 1 Samuel
23:3; see 30:9, 10. Now the six hundred there mentioned are here estimated
by Josephus to have been so many, only by an augmentation of two hundred
afterward, which I suppose is the true solution of this seeming
disagreement.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-25" id="link6note-25">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
25 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-25">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ In this and the two next
sections, we may perceive how Josephus, nay, how Abigail herself, would
understand, the "not avenging ourselves, but heaping coals of fire on the
head of the injurious," Proverbs 25:22; Romans 12:20, not as we do now, of
them into but of leaving them to the judgment of God, "to whom vengeance
belongeth," Deuteronomy 32:35; Psalms 94:1; Hebrews 10:30, and who will
take vengeance on the wicked. And since all God's judgments are just, and
all fit to be executed, and all at length for the good of the persons
punished, I incline to think that to be the meaning of this phrase of
"heaping coals of fire on their heads."]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-26" id="link6note-26">
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<p class="foot">
26 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-26">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ We may note here, that
how sacred soever an oath was esteemed among the people of God in old
times, they did not think it obligatory where the action was plainly
unlawful. For so we see it was in this case of David, who, although he had
sworn to destroy Nabal and his family, yet does he here, and 1 Samuel
25:32-41, bless God for preventing his keeping his oath, and shedding of
blood, which he had swore to do.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-27" id="link6note-27">
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<p class="foot">
27 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-27">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This history of Saul's
consultation, not with a witch, as we render the Hebrew word here, but
with a necromancer, as the whole history shows, is easily understood,
especially if we consult the Recognitions of Clement, B. I. ch. 5. at
large, and more briefly, and nearer the days of Samuel Ecclus. 46:20,
"Samuel prophesied after his death, and showed the king his end, and lift
up his voice from the earth in prophecy," to blot out "the wickedness of
the people." Nor does the exactness of the accomplishment of this
prediction, the very next day, permit us to suppose any imposition upon
Saul in the present history; for as to all modern hypotheses against the
natural sense of such ancient and authentic histories, I take them to be
of very small value or consideration.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-28" id="link6note-28">
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<p class="foot">
28 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-28">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ These great
commendations of this necromantic woman of Endor, and of Saul's martial
courage, when yet he knew he should die in the battle, are somewhat
unusual digressions in Josephus. They seem to me extracted from some
speeches or declamations of his composed formerly, in the way of oratory,
that lay by him, and which he thought fit to insert upon this occasion.
See before on Antiq. B. I. ch. 6 sect. 8.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link6note-29" id="link6note-29">
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<p class="foot">
29 (<SPAN href="#link6noteref-29">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ This way of speaking in
Josephus, of fasting "seven days without meat or drink," is almost like
that of St. Paul, Acts 27:33, "This day is the fourteenth day that ye have
tarried, and continued fasting, having taken nothing:" and as the nature
of the thing, and the impossibility of strictly fasting so long, require
us here to understand both Josephus and the sacred author of this history,
1 Samuel 30:13, from whom he took it, of only fasting fill the evening; so
must we understand St. Paul, either that this was really the fourteenth
day that they had taken nothing till the evening, or else that this was
the fourteenth day of their tempestuous weather in the Adriatic Sea, as
ver. 27, and that on this fourteenth day alone they had continued fasting,
and had taken nothing before that evening. The mention of their long
abstinence, ver. 21, inclines me to believe the former explication to be
the truth, and that the case was then for a fortnight what it was here for
a week, that they kept all those days entirely as lasts till the evening,
but not longer. See Judges 20:26; 21:2; 1 Samuel 14:24; 2 Samuel 1:12;
Antiq. B. VII. ch. 7. sect. 4.]</p>
<p><br/></p>
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