Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 1 Samuel 8-18 -- Part 1 : Dr. Daniel Peterson
Episode Date: June 11, 2022Why do the Israelites demand a king? Dr. Daniel Peterson explores the rise and downfall of Saul, Saul’s complicated relationship with David, and how pride often comes before a spiritual fall.Please ...rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive ProducersDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing & SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsKrystal Roberts: French TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith, and I'm John by the way.
We love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to learn and laugh with you.
As together, we follow him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith. I'm here with my
Now listen to this closely my six hundred Shekel
co-host
John by the way
Shekel of course is Hebrew for grams, right? Yeah, yes. I yes my six hundred gram
Co-host I don't know if you know that reference John six hundredackles. Oh, that was the weight of Goliath's spear alone.
A spearhead. The spearhead was 600 Shackles.
Available in the gift shop today as you leave, right?
John, we are in first Samuel today. We've discussed the first few chapters, but now we're
going to get into the meat of things,
and we have a returning guest. Please tell us who's with us.
Well, we are just so glad to have Brother Daniel, see Peterson back again. Before we hit the
record button, we've been talking and laughing, and we love Brother Peterson, so glad he's here.
And for all of the contributions he has made over the years, in fact, I was going to tell you I have a double cassette recording.
It's called Understanding Islam.
I bet when I first got that, I listened to it 10 times.
It helped me so much.
And not only understanding the Book of Mormon,
but I had a student who was a Muslim, it helped me so much.
Just to see how she treated the Quran, which she brought to class.
It was so helpful to me.
So I have to thank you personally.
Brother Peterson has been a professor of Islamic studies and Arabic
at Brigham Young University and founder of the university's Middle Eastern texts initiative.
And those are not text messages are those hang. He's published and spoken extensively both on
Islamic and LDS subjects. He's formerly the chairman
of the board of the Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies. He's been renamed
now the Neel A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship. His professional work as an
Arabic focuses on the Quran and on Islamic philosophical theology. He's the author among other things
of a biography entitled Muhammad, Prophet of God.
He was part of that witnesses movie,
the interpreter foundation.
And in fact, I hope all of our listeners
will go to interpretafoundation.org
and look at all of the faithful scholarship
that is there and that they can learn and benefit from.
He has a blog that my father-in-law loves to read.
Sick Etnon, which means yes and no, that's Latin.
How do you spell that, John?
S-I-C-E-T-N-O-N. But what's coming up that's pretty exciting is they did the witness's film
about the three witnesses. Now they've got kind of a docu-drama called Undaunted.
And this you can go to witnesses of the book of Mormon.org.
But I want to Dr. Peterson to tell us more about this
undaunted and what it is,
because I'm pretty excited about this.
Let me show you, I don't know if this is gonna be visible
or not, but there it is, and DVD will eventually be streaming.
And it's a docu drama.
The theatrical film witnesses was focused on Joseph Smith and
the three witnesses. This is not a theatrical film. It goes beyond the three witnesses to the eight
witnesses as well. And also what I call the unofficial or informal witnesses, Mary Whitmer,
Emma Smith, Lucy Max Smith, people like that, Josiah Stoll. Other people who saw the place had an encounter with an angelic messenger, things like that.
And it also incorporates scenes from the witness's film, but also scenes filmed specially for it.
The story of Mary Whitmer, for example, the experience of Hiram Page with a mob, things like that
that are quite dramatically portrayed.
And commentary from scholars.
We have several of the most prominent LDS historians.
We have a retired federal judge talking about the importance of eyewitness testimony, a
retired federal prosecutor talking about the same subject.
We have the fellow who made the plates for the movie and who makes them for church visit his centers or church films, talking about what it would
take to make plates to fake them in effect. So just a lot of interesting
perspective, including a couple of non-Laddard A. Saints, who we wanted to get
their perspective on these things. So I'm excited about it. It's actually the
film that I set out to make initially that theatrical film was kind of an
afterthought.
We thought, hey, this would be a great story.
Let's do that.
The Doc Yodrama was the one that we wanted to make.
And so now it's finally appearing.
About two and a half hours long in two parts
doesn't have to be watched all at one sitting.
And then I wanna say something else about a series
of what we're calling Reels,
which are available on the Interpretive Foundation website.
And they are seven to 12 minute short features,
dealing with specific issues.
Oliver Cowdery, Martin Harris, Sidney Rigden,
the reliability of eyewitness testimony,
the Kinderhook plates, James J. Strang.
Issues like that that might come up questions
that might arise while people are thinking
about the witnesses.
Especially we're hoping young people watch them and learn something more about the witnesses than what they have previously known.
Oh, that's so great. I can't wait to see that. I'll watch every minute of it probably repeatedly.
Let's see, I think you did a lecture at BYU in a speeches, one's called a scholar looks at the Book of Mormon. You talked about having a fascination when you were in high school, I think, for guerrilla
warfare.
Yeah, I did.
For some reason, who knows why?
You know, he needs perversity, whatever it was.
I was really interested in guerrilla warfare.
So I read, you know, Che Guevara and Mao Zedong and people like that, theorists of guerrilla
warfare,
not a very reputable hobby.
It got me in trouble.
At one point, I was in the honors program as an undergraduate at BYU and they had you
fill out an individual curriculum planning for them each semester.
I hated those things.
I thought they were a waste of time and so one year I just didn't do it and they kept
pestering me to do it.
So I finally sat down and said, okay, what the heck?
It would ask, you know, for example,
what is your career objective?
Well, some of you may remember the old story
of Patty Hearst, the Aras in California,
who joined a weird group called
the Symbianese Liberation Army.
And she described herself when she was captured
as an urban gorilla.
And so I thought, ah, that sounds good. I'll make that my career objective. So I said career objective, urban gorilla.
What courses you're taking toward this? I didn't figure anybody would read it, right? So I
filled it out and I said, you know, I'm taking some ROTC courses on weapons and tactics,
civil engineering courses on bridge design.
Just picked them out of the catalog and sent it in. Man, I got to meet most of the senior administrators
at BYU. So, you know, I was interested in that kind of thing, but then I was over teaching gospel
doctrine in the Jerusalem branch after I graduated actually and was beginning, I was about
to begin graduate studies. That's a story in itself, but I was looking at the chapters in the book
of Mormon about the Gadiant and robbers and suddenly it occurred to me that Gadiant and robbers
were a textbook case of guerrilla warfare practice. And even in the errors they made, which eventually
led to their at least temporary defeat, that they were, it was like they were following Mao's playbook.
But of course, even if you think Joseph Smith wrote it, more than a century before Mao
wrote anything, so I'm thinking, how did Joseph do this?
How would he have known anything about it?
Joseph's idea of the military was fight and drum parades about the revolutionary war.
And you're dressing up in his lieutenant generals uniform reviewing
the troops on his horse Charlie in Navu.
That was not guerrilla warfare, which is not romantic at all.
And yet the Book of Warman accurately describes it.
And I thought that is stunning, really.
A small thing, but it's those throwaway details where you think, how did he pull this off?
Thank you so much, because that's what I remember learning from you was like, yeah, they
didn't occupy territory.
They just came out of the mountains attacked and disappeared again.
And when they got too big and they did occupy territory, then that was their downfall,
right?
That was the big era that Mao warned against, what he called premature regularization,
where you think it's a mouthful.
I don't know what it is in Chinese,
but it's where you think you're ready to go toe-to-toe
with a regular army and you're really not yet.
But he learned from that that you have to buy your time
until you really are ready,
because once you hold territory, then you have to defend it.
Up until then, you're just lightning strikes,
attack and withdraw and blend in in demoralize the enemy
But the book of warmen is perfect on that just perfect Dan Peterson is the the Hank Aaron of religious educators
It's a home run every time or two minutes in right yeah, all right
Well, let's jump in we are in first Samuel today Dan
We're gonna kind of hand it over to you. We'll throw in some comments here and there
But when we left off with Dr. Stratherne, Samuel was a young man, grew and the Lord was with him
And then we pick up continuing with the stories
By chapter eight, he's old and he's got sons that are supposed to sort of assume his role and it's the old story
It happened to the other previous high priest.
These sons turned out to be corrupt.
They're taking bribes and so on.
And so the elders of Israel come to Samuel and say, this just isn't satisfactory.
Which is obviously true.
And I think Samuel may have a little bit of a problem with that.
He never quite admits the problem with his boys.
You can imagine that. But Israel says, this will not do. But they propose a solution.
We want a king. And they say in verse 5 of chapter 8, now make us a king to judge us like
all the nations. There's a lot packed into that little phrase. Make us like all the nations.
That's exactly what they're not supposed to be. They're not supposed to be like all
the nations. But they were a tribal Confederacy at this point.
It ruled over by judges.
And the word in Semitic language is still an Arabic today
for judging is also related to the word for governing.
So it's kind of a little bit of both.
It's not just being serving a judge in our modern sense,
but they wanted to make them a king
and Samples not pleased because he knows, well, the Lord will
soon tell him that they're not rejecting him so much, although they are kind of rejecting his family,
but his family brought it on themselves. But they're rejecting the Lord. The thing is, please,
Samuel and Samu pray to the Lord. And the Lord says unto Samuel, Harkin unto the voice of the
people, give them what they want. For they, and this is important, verse 7, for they have not rejected thee, but they've
rejected me that I should not reign over them.
I mean, this is a decisive thing, and I can't help but think forward to the appearance of
Christ before Pilate.
When Pilate talks about Jesus claiming to be the king of the Jews and the crowd responds,
we have no king but Caesar.
And I think, man, do you not realize this is an echo
of that fateful day when the Marquis of Israel was born. And it displeased Samuel, it displeased
the Lord. The Lord says, look, they've done this all the time. So you go ahead and give them what they
want. But, verse nine, how be it? Yet protests solemnly unto them. Show them the manner of the King that shall
reign over them. Given what they want, but tell them what this is going to cost them.
Yep. They're not going to go into this blindly. They need to know in advance what this is
going to do. And so he lays out, this will be the manner of the King that will be, shall
reign over you in verse 11. And it talks about all these things that he will do. Abuse is
really. He'll draft all your people,
he'll make them his servants,
he'll draft them into his army,
he'll make them work and cook for him
and take care of his palace and reap his harvest
and make his instruments of war.
He'll take your daughters, make them bakers and so on,
to take your fields, your vineyards, your olive yards,
even the best of them,
he'll give them out to his cronies.
It was servants, it says here.
You know, he'll take the 10th of your seed.
This is probably in addition to the tithe
that they're supposed to pay.
Yeah.
This is tax.
Yeah, it's a tax.
Now, some of us today would say, wow, 10%.
I'll take it.
Yeah, it's a good tax rate.
I'll take it.
It's presumptuous on his part to take the same amount, the same percentage that the
Lord takes.
So now it's not going to be 10%, but 20% that they have to fork over.
That begins to be a burden.
And he'll take your best young man, your donkeys, you'll put them to his work, take the tenth
of your sheep, and you'll be his servants.
And the word for servant is, well, it's hard to distinguish in ancient Hebrew between
servant and slave.
And later on, by the way, when Goliath is addressing the Israelite troops, he'll identify
them as the servants of Saul.
They should be the servants of the Lord, but it's striking that that is in fact what they
become, certainly in the eyes of the Philistines.
They're just the servants of their king, but the people refused to obey Samuel. They say, nay, but we will have a king over us in verse 19.
And they repeat it that we also maybe like all the nations, and that our king may judge us and
go out before us and fight our battles. I think they've thought that this tribal confederation
business didn't work really well, but that's
apparently what the Lord wanted for them.
He didn't want a king.
Now interestingly, later on, when they do have the battle with Goliath, when Saul is chosen,
he's one of the things that makes him stand out is that he's a full head taller than anybody
else.
He's a big guy.
But then they confront Goliath, who's, according to most scholars, that comes out to
about nine feet tall.
They want a king to defend them, fight their battles. But when the time comes and their king meets an even bigger guy,
he's terrified and the whole army of Israel is terrified with him.
If you don't have the Lord fighting your battle, which is, I think, part of the moral of this whole story with David.
David goes out and he's's relatively little guy and he's
got no armor and he defeats Goliath. We'll talk about that later. But in fact, your strength
doesn't consist in the fact that you have a tall king because they haven't even bigger warrior.
The Lord says to Sam, go ahead, harken unto their voice, make them a king.
It always surprises me when I read this because his argument sounds so convincing.
And he gets right to the end of it and they say,
yeah, but we want a king. It's like they didn't hear any of that, you know, and having tried to raise
kids, it's like, okay, but this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, but they want what they
want when they want it. And it's intriguing to me too, the idea of hearken to the voice of the
people, which was so important as the reign of the judges would introduce in the Book of Mormon, that do your business by the voice
of the people.
And I see that, well, that's a principle here too, but they'll get the consequences of
it.
They will.
So, you know, there are the roots of a kind of democratic idea, even in the Old Testament.
And, you know, the Book of Mormon tells us the people won't usually choose evil,
but sometimes they do.
I mean, I know it's bad for them in some circles
to cite someone like Hitler,
but Hitler was democratically elected.
We got a minority of the vote,
but the highest single vote total,
the people chose evil.
The motto of some totalitarians,
I've heard is one man, one vote once.
Once you've won, but that's it.
No more democratic elections.
So when people make a really bad choice, they need to recognize that it may carry bad consequences
for them.
But they've been warned.
I use this with my students, this verse five, make us like all the nations, verse 20,
make us like all the nations.
The idea of we're tired of being different, tired of being a peculiar people.
We want to be like everybody else.
Tired of getting up in the morning and going to seminary.
I'm tired of everyone looking there's the Latter-day Saint kid.
It reminds me of the Lord's preface in the Doctrine and Covenants in section one,
where it says that their image is an idol in the likeness of the world.
I want to be like the world. Every man walketh in his own way, and after the image of his own God, which is in the likeness of the world, about what verse 16 I think.
And it's that same thing. I want to be like the world. I want to be like the nations.
We don't like standing out, especially, you know, we can say this about teenagers, they want to be part of the group, but it's true of all of us to an extent.
We don't like being mocked or looked down upon. And I think of the the great and spacious
building in the Book of Mormon, where the people are up there in the building and they're
pointing the finger of mockery, the finger of scorn. And some of the people, the protecting
the fruit of the tree, fall away for that very reason. Man, it's embarrassing.
They're making fun of me.
I don't like this.
And yet the gospel, the kingdom, the church,
have always got to be out of sync with the world.
If they weren't, that would be a matter of concern.
That's right.
Yeah.
The point is not to be weird for the sake of being weird.
We should be different.
If we're in lockstep with everybody around us,
something has gone seriously wrong.
And I can say that when I was growing up,
when I began to be active in the church,
and most of my friends, well, almost none of my friends
were active, Latter-day Saints.
So I had a word that didn't have very many young people in it.
And I was in a high school with very few Latter-day Saints.
And it began to bother me because I began to be very sensitive
on certain issues where if I
was three minutes late to sacrament meeting, I felt really terrible.
I'd really blown it.
My dad wasn't a member, my mother wasn't active, and then I'd think about my friends who
were doing, I won't go much further, but they were doing things a lot worse than being
three minutes late for a sacrament meeting.
And I thought, no, they don't feel any guilt at all.
How's this an improvement?
You know, I feel rotten for doing things
that they would, they would even think about.
You go through that phase where you're thinking,
is this really better?
Well, in the long term, of course it is.
And in the not very long term, it's better.
But still, there were moments where I thought,
it'd be so easy to just toss all this aside,
and just be like my friends.
I think of a really sad confession
of a really prominent scholar you'd recognize his name.
He's passed away now, but he told me once how sad he was
that he had been critical of the church
when his children were growing up.
He was active, he was committed,
he was a believer, he said,
but somehow I
conveyed my criticism and not my faith. And now most of his children are
disaffected. And he was so sorrowful and he said, he just hoped the Lord
would forgive him for that. It was such a mistake. Because he genuinely was
committed, believed very explicitly.
I've noticed that they're going to choose a king,
but the Lord doesn't shut the door.
He says, all right, let's do it your way.
Let's go get a king.
I'll help you out in this, even though it's not gonna work out.
Yeah, he does.
And so he inspires Samuel to go and choose a king.
And so you get that story in chapter nine.
There's a man of Benjamin.
Benjamin was the smallest of the tribes.
It effectively disappears.
Generations later kind of merges with the tribe of Judah
and just vanishes.
But he goes out to visit with a man of Benjamin,
whose name was Kish, and he has a son,
whose name was Saul.
Now, a choice young man, it says, and a goodly.
And there was not among the children of Israel
a goodlier person than he, from his shoulders and upward that he was higher than any of the people. In other words, he was a full-head
taller than anybody else. He was a big, strong guy. And what they're looking for really,
it seems is kind of like a war leader as much as anything. And so it kind of makes sense that
you look at him, well, he's big and he's strong. Like Mormon was large in stature.
In these days, the generals were often right in the thick of battle.
They weren't necessarily back behind the lines plotting strategy.
They were out there fighting, having a guy who's strong and tall and has long armspan,
this makes sense.
But he's pretty humble in a sense.
And he is.
I mean, he comes from humble circumstances and he actually starts off off actually humble. That will change. That will change. Yes. And it's the old line from Lord
Acton, you know, power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts. Absolutely. I think
that's what happens here. It's a sad cautionary tale. It starts off with a very domestic or humble everyday kind of case.
Saul's father has some donkeys and they're lost and he sends Saul and a friend servant
to go out and try to find these donkeys and they look around and they look around and they can't
find them. And finally they come to a land called Zuf. Saul says, let's go back. I mean, we can't
find them. But the servant says, no, there no, there's in this city a man of God.
He's an honorable man.
All that he say has come, surely to pass.
Now, let us go through the period of entry.
He can show us our way that we should go.
And it's interesting to me that Saul doesn't seem to have heard of him.
Samuel is a famous guy, but Saul, there's several clues here in these chapters that Saul
is maybe not the most
spiritually sensitive guy around.
His servant knows about Samuel, the great man of God, the seer.
Saul doesn't know anything about him.
So he says, let's go ask him.
They talk about getting a gift and we'll give him something.
This reminds me in a way of the story of Joseph Smith.
One of the things Joseph was known for among people who knew him, I won't even say in the early days of the church, before the founding of the church,
it was his ability to find things. There are several stories about that that he could see things
at a distance. This is the kind of thing that apparently Samuel could do, and he's called a
seer. That was one of his gifts, very humble. I mean, you think surely there are more exalted things than this that you can do than finding donkeys, but it is something he can do. And Joseph could do the same sort
of thing. And he finally gives that partly because Joseph Senior tells him, you've got
a great calling. You shouldn't be wasting it on this kind of nonsense. Stop looking
for lost coins and things like that. That's not what you're supposed to do.
You've got this ability and devoted to God.
There's a point of contact there between Samuel and Joseph, I think.
So anyway, they encounter Samuel and Samuel has already been warned.
Verse 15, that the day before, there will be a manual show up out of the land of Benjamin
and he's the one that you're supposed to anoint to be the captain over my people Israel. He may save my people
out of the land of the Philistines. I have looked upon my people because their cry has come
unto me. Same kind of language you get in Moses is called to deliver the people of Israel
out of Egypt. I have heard their cry. And when Samuel saw Saul, the Lord said unto him,
behold the man whom I speak to the of,
this same shall reign over my people.
So Samuel gives him this advice.
He's forget about the donkeys.
Verse 20, they've been found, don't worry about them.
But what's really important is you,
the desire of Israel, it says,
on whom is all the desire of Israel?
Is it not on the end on all of thy father's house?
Now the desire of Israel ought to be God, but oh well.
It's right now on Saul.
And Saul responds in a humble way.
I used to say, am I not a Benjaminite
of the smallest of the tribes of Israel, my family,
the least of all the families of the tribes of Benjamin?
Wherefore, then, speakest thou so to me.
This is commendable.
He starts off well, at least he seems to.
And so you go through this little episode of
Samuels calling him and anointing him,
at the beginning of chapter 10.
And I want to say something about that,
that in chapter 10, Samuels takes a vile of oil
and pours it upon his head.
Now, Latter-day Saints
are aware of anointing. We still believe in the use of oil for certain kinds of anointing,
not only inside the temple, but outside of the temple. But the word for anointing is related
to the word Messiah. The verb to anoint is related to the word Messiah.
Anointed one is Messiah. Yeah, so Christos, Christ, that's the Greek word
related to anointing, a chrysum people sometimes talk about.
The Messiah, the Savior, is the anointed one
in the ultimate sense, but in the meantime,
kings are anointed.
He's anointed to be a king as well, Jesus is.
Kings have been anointed, we'll have two of them,
in this set of chapters, Saul and then David,
who are anointed with oil, literally, to become kings.
And so these chapters, I think,
ought to be of interest to Latter-day Saints,
who know something about oil and nointing.
And they still do that, I understand,
during the coronation of the British monarch.
There's an anointing with oil,
which is carryover from biblical practices.
I'm sure inspired by these very chapters.
It's a literal anointing with oil that makes them literally the anointed one.
Man, we start out so well here. Like you're thinking, this is going to work. We found
the most humble guy in all of Israel. This is going to work. And it's not going to work.
Now unfortunately it goes to his head. Saul is a tragic story.
He's not simply evil.
Some of the later kings of Israel will be simply evil.
He wasn't.
But he goes very bad.
Has to be removed, and his line doesn't succeed him afterwards, which is terribly sad.
This is a lesson in Section 121.
As soon as man gets a little power authority as they supposed
It just they can't handle it. They cannot handle it
One of the things I love about these stories most of us probably are not gonna have the opportunity to serve as kings of Judah or Israel or anything like that
Not in this life, but they're so human in a way
This is the same thing it can go to
life, but they're so human in a way. This is the same thing. It can go to advancement in a business, in a corporation, or advancement, frankly, in the church. We have to be careful that if we're called
to a position, it doesn't go to our heads that we don't become better than others because we have
that position or that we think that there's glory in it for us. That's not what it's about. I really
like the principle that we should look at the scripture
and think, boy, look how stupid he was,
look at how wicked he was.
Is there any chance that I'm guilty of this sort of thing?
I mean, could this apply to me?
I'm not solved, but have I ever behaved like this?
When, man, I succeed at something,
I get an appointment or get an office or win some praise.
And I start thinking, I really am good.
Because if he just could have kept that attitude, if he could have kept that, am I not a Benjamin, a smallest tribe of Israel, my family's the least of all the families
of the tribe of Benjamin, man, if you could keep that humility, you're going to be okay,
Saul, but he loses that. Moses and and Enic who kind of started out with I
have all the people hate me. I'm slow of speech. Enic says and they seem to have
been able to keep it I guess I like the idea of sometimes in the scriptures
you have examples sometimes you have warnings. This is one of those that
starts as an example and sadly ends up don't do this a warning. Yeah.
I remember my brother telling me once
that when he was called as a bishop,
he said it was probably the darkest day of his life
in terms of testimony.
Why?
Because he said, I'd always looked up to bishops.
And I found out they're just like me.
Yeah.
Something I was one, I thought, really?
But I don't think that's a bad attitude to have.
Somewhere I've seen a line from a Heberjee grant, I can't remember where it's been years,
where he said, if you ever feel totally adequate to a church calling, that's a real problem.
You should feel intimidated, humbled, and worried. Not to the point of being
disabled, but thinking, man, I need the help because I just can't do this. If you come
to it like, man, I've been waiting for this position for a long time, heads are going to
roll. I'm really going to make changes here. You know, then I think you need to go back
to the drawing board a little bit.
Anyone who wants to be bishop should be and I've heard that line from general authorities to
You want this position this idea that you should be humbled by the colleague and intimidated by it rather than exhilarated
Boy now I have power and authority and this is what I deserve
It's about time they called me that's entirely the wrong attitude to me
That's really relevant to these passages that Saul starts off with that attitude.
And so you think at first, this is going to go well.
This is a good guy.
But he can't keep it.
And that's the tragedy of Saul.
But he's not a rotten person.
But he turns to the worse.
The curfew.
Yeah, it takes hold.
Yeah.
People are called together in verse 17 at mispear.
Samuel wants to manifest to them who has been called.
He kind of recites their history to them
and you've rejected your God.
He says again in verse 19,
he saved you.
He himself saved you.
You know, you didn't need a king then,
but you said unto him,
nay, but set a king over us.
Now therefore present yourselves before the Lord
by your tribes and by your thousands.
I mean, you're gonna get what you asked for.
So Samuel caused all the tribes of Israel to come near.
The tribe of Benjamin is taken.
I suppose they cast lots or determined in some way,
which tribe is relevant.
Then he caused the tribe of Benjamin to come forth
and he chooses the family.
And Saul is chosen out of the family.
And they can't find him.
And this is actually sort of comical it away.
Therefore they inquired of the Lord further if the man should yet come to the other and
the Lord answered, behold, he had hit himself among the stuff.
Now what that means is they've all gathered from all over Israel to mispef for this big pan
Israelite meeting.
Saul's hanging among the baggage.
He does not want to be king.
He's hiding out there.
So they ran and fetched him fence.
I wanna see a sacriot meeting like this.
The new bishop is so and so where is he?
He's out in the parking lot.
She does not want this going.
It's in the coat closet.
So then they see him and he's had,
had his shoulders taller than anybody else.
You can't hide.
And no, and Sample says,
you see him, whom the Lord has chosen.
There's none like him among all the people.
And all the people shouted and said,
God saved the king, which, you know,
sounds very British.
Yeah.
And you notice some people really favor him. And then of course, there's some, the children of Bileal And you know, some people really favor him.
And then of course, there's some, the children of Bileal, you know, bad guys, the kind of
thugs, we say, how shall this man save us?
And they despised him and brought him no presence, but he held his peace.
He doesn't respond to them with anger or anything like that.
And there'll be a really nice illustration of that later.
In some ways, I've thought sometimes the best candidates for positions might be precisely
those who don't think themselves adequate, who aren't seeking the position, who would
rather on the whole just be left alone or be junior Sunday school teacher or something
like that.
Don't want to be Bishop or State President.
That's why six months before my bishop is released, I usually send in a
full portfolio on why I should be the next bishop. And it almost gear. That's right. Boy,
I've got, I've got plans. Yeah. Here we go. I've got my ties. I'll picked out president.
Here we go. A friend of mine who was serving as my department chair was eventually chosen to be the dean of my college.
He didn't want to be the dean of the college.
And so he set out campaign for it.
He put up signs on his door, you know, announcing his candidacy for dean and all that sort of thing.
And he got a call from the academic vice president who told him, look, it's not going to work.
You're going to be the new Dean. And here's the funny thing.
That's very same weekend that he was chosen as Dean. He had been my department chair. He was also
chosen as he'd been serving as a bishop of a campus ward. He was also chosen as the state president
of his home state, the same weekend. And here's the really terrible thing. For some reason, there was a mix up
and he was not released as the Bishop of the campus ward
for about a month after his calling
as stake president of his home stake.
And he's a new dean as well.
And I ran into him in the hallway one day shortly
that afternoon and I started to make a crack
and he said, don't, it's not funny.
My life is over.
That's not funny.
Too soon, too soon.
Yeah, but I love the people who get the callings
who didn't want them, but rise to the occasion.
They do it because they were called.
And so far, Saul looks like that kind of guy and then you know
We get into chapter 11 of
That always sounds ominous to me chapter 11
Endering chapter 11
We get into the story of Nash the Ammonite this is interesting because there is actually a passage in the Dead Sea Scrolls
That should come at the end of chapter 10 that gives a little more context for the story.
There's a version of Samuel in the four Qsams, something or other.
From cave four, it's the famous cave.
If you ever go to the Dead Sea area of the Kuran, you go out to that overlook and you see
the cave right below you, that's it.
That's the cave this document came from.
And it has a few verses that aren't in our text of the Bible about how
Nahash the Ammonite had already done this kind of thing. He'd been harassing the Israelites
and putting out eyes and he's just a really obnoxious, terrible person, right? So he comes
up and he encamps against Jabash Giliad. Now, the Ammonites are roughly in the area of
today's Jordan. I mean, they're on the other side of the Jordan River. The modern city of Aman has that name for a reason.
That's roughly the Tarakjoy, the Ammonites.
And so Jabash Giliad is also on the other side
of the Jordan River of all the Israelite settlements.
It's kind of exposed because it's not in the land
of Israel proper, what we think of today as the land
of Israel, it's over on the other side.
And so this guy from the Ammonites
decides he's gonna come after them.
They're kind of an outlier, kind of off by themselves.
All the men of jabish said to him,
make a covenant with us and we will serve thee
because he's besieging them.
And now has the Ammonite answered them
on this condition, well I make a covenant with you
that I may thrust out all your right eyes and lay it for a reproach upon all Israel.
Now that's an attractive deal.
You can see whether they're not very enthused about it.
And you know, this is meant, not only it's cruel, but it's also meant as a humiliation
to have an entire population that had to submit to have their right eyes removed.
I mean,
they and their lives would never overcome the shame of this. I think there also may be a practical reason. These are archers. They have that reputation. Well, if you eliminate one of their eyes,
they can't see as well to be Bowman. They will be kind of neutralized and they lose their sense
of distance. It's sadistic and it's cruel, but it also has a point. It's a propaganda point and a military point.
These days, they kind of allowed kind of gentlemanly warfare in a way, ironically.
The elders said to him, give us seven days' respite.
We'll send messages unto all the coasts of Israel.
That is, coasts, not just the coastal cities, but all the regions of Israel is King James
Isch for all the regions of Israel. And that's King James-ish for all the regions
of Israel. And if there be no man to save us, we'll come out today. I mean, if this is
the only choice we have, rather than a massacre of everyone in the town, okay, we'll do it.
So the messengers come to Gibbia of Saul. That's an area in, so north of Jerusalem. They
tell the tidings and the years of the people, all the people lift up their voices and weep
because they don't know what to do.
And Saul comes, he's out with the herd.
And this is interesting, because he hasn't yet become the king with a palace.
He's basically a war leader.
Well, it hasn't been a war, an active war up till now.
And so he's just out doing what he'd done before, handling the herds, and he comes in
at the end of the day.
And this is, what's the problem?
And they tell him. And then the end of the day, and this is what's the problem. And they tell him.
And then the Spirit of God comes upon Saul.
And we might simply say, he was filled
with a Spirit of indignation.
It may have been the Spirit of God as well,
but it's certainly, I think, he's just infuriated.
This is a terrible thing to demand of fellow Israelites.
None.
Injustice, it's a humiliation, and it's naked aggression.
So he takes a yoke of oxen, he
hues them in pieces, and he sends them throughout all the coasts of Israel by the hands of messengers,
saying, whosoever comeeth not forth after Saul and after Samuel? Social it be done unto his oxen.
And the fear of the Lord fell on the people and they came out with one consent. It's a very striking image. The cuts up these oxen sends the parts around.
It's kind of a weird thing to do, but it's a simileoth.
It's like what you find in the Book of Mormon,
you know, where the people rend their garments
listening to Captain Moroni.
May we be rent even as our garments are rent.
Use a material object and say,
if we don't do X Y and Z,
may something happen to us just like what happened to this material thing.
In this case, the oxen, you have it in the book of Ruth, for example,
where repeatedly you have characters say, for Samuel, too, the Lord do so to me.
And more also, if I do not do X Y and Z and some comment here, say, well,
it probably meant is, you know,
some image like drawing a hand across the throat, like the image of a sacrifice or something like
that. The Lord do that to me if I don't fulfill the oath that I'm making, which I think
is a really, really interesting, striking image. It's not something we would do today. It's
got some echoes. So he becomes the war leader they've wanted, gives these great numbers,
and the people come to him, and he goes, and he defeats the Ammonites, just scatters them.
And then, verse 12, the people said unto Samuel, who is he that said, shall Saul reign over
us?
Bring the man that we may put them to death, saying, boy, there were people who didn't think
he was up to the job.
But look at what he did.
I want a great leader he's proven to be. Let's put those
people to death. And Saul said, no, no, no, shall not a man be put to death this day. For today,
the Lord hath wrought salvation in Israel. That's the humble Saul again. Let there be no recriminations,
no revenge. And God did it. I didn't do it. God did it. He's still doing okay at this point. And we admire him.
He's an admirable character at this point. He saves his people. I mean, with the help of God,
obviously, but he doesn't take the credit. He doesn't take the glory. Samusus, let's go renew the
kingdom and they go to Gilgal, which is probably down somewhere by Jericho,
probably in the minefield over toward the Jordan River now,
which is a good place to renew the kingdom,
because that's probably where the Israelites had crossed
to enter into the land of Israel in the first place.
So they're kind of renewing things,
okay, now we're going to have a kingdom.
This reminds me a little bit of Abraham Lincoln, right?
Choosing not to destroy the South after the end of the war.
Yeah, and we do admire people who do that.
Who have the chance for vengeance and they don't take it.
They don't take it, yeah.
Is this the author telling us what he used to be like?
So when we get to the point where he becomes...
The contrast becomes clear and it's just tragic.
Yeah, but we can see why the Lord would have chosen him, why Samuel would have been pleased
with him, and even at the end, we'll get repeated sort of poignant notes about how Samuel
never sees him again after he's rejected, but he mourns for him.
Because he started off as a good man.
Samuel regretted establishing a kingdom, a
kingship. He didn't want to establish a monarchy, but Saul was a good guy. Now, Samuel is about
to take his leave here in chapter 12, and it's an interesting passage to me. Basically goes to the
people and says, all Israel behold. I've given you what you wanted. King Walketh before you. I am old and gray-headed.
He's just behold my sons are with you.
I mean, I still, he still brings up his sons
and I'm thinking, what do you do that?
Sort of paternal, you know, whatever.
Your sons are jerks.
It's a dad, very human to me.
Behold my sons are with you.
And I've walked before you from my childhood,
under this day.
And that's really true. This is a prophet whose career began really young.
And he's been a prominent figure in Israel all this time.
Witness against me, he says, in verse 3, before the Lord, before his anointed, the King.
And then he asks them, have I done wrong things? Have I taken your ox? Have I defrauded you?
Have I oppressed anybody?"
And they all say no. And then he says in verse 5, The Lord is witness against you and He's anointed His witness this day.
They have not found ought in my hand. And they answered, He is witness.
It reminds me a little bit of Paul in Acts taking his sort of farewell tour of the cities of Asia.
He knows he's not going to see them again. And he goes and he
says, at one point, have I delivered the message to you? Did I deliver to you what the Lord told me to
tell you? You be witnesses against yourselves now that I did. I delivered to you everything the
Lord command me to tell you. And they say, yeah, you did. In that case, Paul, whose name originally is
Saul, by the way, I think he's probably aware that difficulties are coming, the apostasy is coming, but he wants it certified that he did what he was supposed
to do. What happens to them afterwards is not his fault. He carried out his mission and Samuel
is doing kind of the same thing. Do you remember Elder Holland doing that with his Book of Mormon talk?
I want it clear. When I stand before the judgment thrown of God, I declared the book of
Mormon is true. And I think that's powerful. When a witness, a prophet, an apostle bears that
solemn testimony that says, you heard it from me. I mean, there's a passage from George Coochanan
that I have always been struck by. George Canan, apparently, on several public occasions indicated
that he had seen the Savior face to face.
And at one point, he's speaking,
and he says, I want you to know
that you heard someone today who knows what he is saying,
and that you heard him testify,
that he knows with a certainty,
that God lives, and that Jesus Christ lives for,
I have seen him. And I think, you know, it takes a lot to toss that out.
This is someone who's bearing solemn testimony to you,
as powerfully as any human can.
The Lord is witness against you.
We've done it.
Yeah, you told the truth.
And then he goes on to give them the message again
that you know, you have rebelled against God consistently through your history.
And he've done it again, verse 12.
You said, and to be naivete, King shall reign over us when the Lord your God was your King.
That's in verse 12.
But this is what you wanted and the Lord has given you your King.
You've got him now.
But he says, I'm going to give you a witness to what I'm saying is true. Verse 16, and
this doesn't stand out as much to us as it might have, or as it would have to them. Now,
therefore, stand and see this great thing. He says in verse 16, which the Lord will do before
your eyes. Is it not wheat harvest today? I will call unto the Lord and he shall send thunder
and rain that you may perceive and see that your wickedness is great, which you have done in the
side of the Lord and asking your king.
So Samuel called unto the Lord and the Lord sent Thundra and Rain that day, and all the
people greatly feared the Lord and Samuel.
Now what's so impressive about that?
The harvest season is the dry season in Palestine, in Israel.
And so there shouldn't be Thundra and Rain on a day like that.
And certainly not just when Samuels is okay,
I'm gonna call on it and it's gonna come.
And it does.
And so there's thunder and rain and the people say,
oh, you know, wow, you're right.
All the people said in the Samuels,
pray for thy servant, son to the Lord thy God
that we die not.
For we have added unto all our sins this evil
to ask us a king.
But Samuels' look, I'm still to go on praying for you, verse 23, God forbid
that I should sin against the Lord and ceasing to pray for you.
But you have sinned, fear the Lord.
But if you still do wickedly, he ends the chapter of verse 25, you shall be consumed, both
ye and your king.
So you've got to stop doing these things. The Lord, the Lord
is long suffering with you, but, you know, and even I am because I love you, you're my people,
and I'll pray for you, but against our advice repeatedly, you've chosen to go down this path.
Okay, now we're going to see the beginning of the downfall of Saul in chapter 13. Saul
rained one year, and when'd reigned two years over
Israel, then he begins to do all the things that Samuel was sort of predicted. He'll
start drafting your people and you know before we see him he's just out there
working with the herds and when the time comes for a war he calls on people to
join him and they fight. Now he's going to create a standing army. Chosen
3,000 men of Israel. The rest of the people who send every man to his tent. Now he's going to create a standing army. Chosen 3,000 men of Israel. The rest of the people
who send every man to his tent. So he, but he gets a large group together. I mean, the numbers in
Israel are probably not that huge in those days. So, but to have a 3,000 person standing army,
that's got to be maintained. He's got to tax people to get the funds to feed them and
maintain their equipment and all that kind of thing. So he is beginning to become a king like all the nations, which is exactly what Samuel
had said and what they wanted, what they said they wanted.
And so then he has this really interesting thing where Jonathan goes off and smights the
Philistines and then the Philistines gather themselves together to fight with Israel,,000 chariots and 6000 horsemen people as the sand which is on the seashore in multitude
And they came up and did war and when the people of Israel saw it they were in a straight. It says in verse 6
People were distressed the people who had hide themselves in caves and in thickets and in rocks and in high places and in pits and
Some of the Hebrews even went over the Jordan to the land of Gadd and Gilead, which
is not exactly friendly territory.
They've had problems over there before.
The people followed him trembling for Saul.
He's still in Gilegout.
The people are there.
Don't run away.
Are just terrified.
And he stays for seven days.
Samuel's going to meet him.
The Samuel doesn't come.
And so here's where Saul does his first really,
really wrong thing. And it will become an accelerating series of them. Saul gives up on waiting for Samuel.
Samuel said, I'll see you there. And, you know, because here and before,
Saul even calls upon people to join him and Samuel. It's the king and the prophet, you know,
fighting together. And he starts off that way. but Saul says, okay, he's not coming.
Bring Hither a burned offering to me and peace offerings.
And he offered the bread offering.
And then it came to pass as soon as he had made an end of offering,
the bread offering behold Samuel came.
Saul went out to meet him that he might salute him.
And Samuel said, what has thou done?
Saul said, because I saw that the people were scattered from me,
and that thou came us not within the days appointed, and that the Philistines gathered themselves
together at Michmash, therefore said, I, the Philistines will come down upon me down to Gilgau,
and I have not made supplication under the Lord. I forced myself there,
for I talked myself into it, or I thought this would be a good idea, and offered a bread offering.
talked myself into it, or I thought this would be a good idea, and offered a bread offering. Samuel said to Saul, thou hast done foolishly, thou hast not kept the commandments of the Lord thy God,
which he commanded thee. For now would the Lord have established thy kingdom upon Israel forever,
but now thy kingdom shall not continue. The Lord hath sought him a man after his own heart,
and the Lord hath commanded him to be captain over his people, because Thou hast not kept that, which the Lord commanded thee.
Now, what's his sin here?
He doesn't have the authority to do this kind of an offering.
And he takes it upon himself.
You know, on one level, you can say, well, it wasn't ill-intended, but it was really
bad judgment, and it was a usurpation of Samuel's divine authority.
It's like committing a sin.
It is committing a sin of usurping priesthood authority.
I would say, look, if you're waiting for someone to give a blessing, and he doesn't come,
and you don't have the priesthood, you still shouldn't step forward and say,
by the authority of priesthood, I give you a blessing.
We don't have the authority to step in on behalf of a church leader.
If I don't have the approval to baptize someone, I don't have the keys.
I can't just go ahead and baptize.
You wait, there's an order in the kingdom and Saul violated it.
And he knew it.
He knew it.
Yep, he did.
Now you can understand his reasoning.
This is a transition step to becoming bad, but it was bad nonetheless.
And so Samo says to him, look, okay,
you're not going to be overthrown as king,
but your son won't succeed you.
Your line won't succeed you after you.
You've lost that privilege of becoming the sire
of a line of kings.
And we would say from our point of view,
of being in the line of the Messiah himself.
That will become the Davidic House, the role of the Davidic House, not the House of Saul, son of Kish.
It could have been apparently, but it wasn't.
It's a crucial misstep, not the last one.
And it may show a certain degree of arrogance or I'm the king.
So I can step forward and do this act.
I mean, we're in tight circumstances.
Don't need to wait, but he doesn't have the right king though. He is he shouldn't do this doesn't matter what your status is outside of the church in the church
There's no order and and you may be a corporate president and your bishop may be who knows what some really humble profession
But still in the church he's the boss in your award.
When an interesting thing happens at military academies and so forth, when you've got a sergeant
being the bishop over a captain or a major, who's his first or second counselor, that sort
of thing happens sometimes in the military, where all those ranks disappear when you're
in a plesiastical setting.
I remember talking to someone on my mission who
was a serviceman from Germany and American servicemen.
And I just, I asked him the question, so
does it ever happen that a general is a member of a state
and the state president is of a much lower rank?
He said, oh yeah, that happens.
And I said, how does it work? He said, really well,
because we understand that.
The general commands on six days a week in non-aclesiastical things. One of the lines I loved
most in that meeting with Elder Gong. As I say, it was Elder Gong and his wife and three
others of us for a couple of hours talking about an interesting issue. And toward the
end of it, one of our number, the non-general authority and general authority wife contingent,
one of them said Elder Gong, well, we're really grateful for certain things that we've been
talking about. And what you do, he says, I can tell you that we in the pews really appreciate this.
And Elder Gone came back really quickly and very mildly and said, we're all in the pews.
Down in that verse 12, I forced myself, for, is this a rationalization of, look,
I had no choice.
I had to do this.
What's that I forced myself?
I think that's kind of what it suggests.
I talked myself into it.
It means it suggests to me that he thought about it.
He wanted to wait, but then he made this decision and it was a wrong decision.
Again, I think it's a transitional
bad deed. This is not evil Saul. This is pretty good Saul, but flawed Saul. Thinking about this and
thinking, wow, you know, we're in kind of a tight military situation. I need the blessing of God.
Samuel hasn't come. He's a little late. I think in a tight circumstance like this, I can do it.
But there are certain circumstances where no, it isn't fine to step forward and do something
like this.
What the Lord has always been trying to teach the Israelites, I think, is his exactness
in obeying his commandments.
I think that's one of the reasons for a lot of the little commandments about not eating
this or eating that.
And it's to teach us that you keep these rules.
I'll say this about our own
observance of the word of wisdom. I think the word of wisdom is valuable in and of itself.
Obviously, it's a good code of health and so on. But it also teaches us obedience.
People have asked me, do you really think that drinking a cup of coffee would send you to hell?
My answer is probably not you. I mean, if you're a non-member, I'm sure it wouldn't.
But me, maybe, maybe, because it's not so much
the cup of coffee, that's nothing.
It's the attitude that would say,
I can drink this and it really doesn't matter.
As it does matter, not intrinsically,
people make it more difficult sometimes,
come up with these ridiculous thought experiments
Well, what if you were in the desert dying of thirst and all you had was a thermos of coffee
I'd imagine a certain point the Lord is gonna say go ahead and drink the coffee
Come on, but that's not the same thing. It's the light attitude that says I can do this
I can violate a little bit of the command
I can shave a little bit off the rules, and I'll be fine.
Well, you start shaving the rules a little bit, and you shave them more, and then more, and pretty soon there are no rules.
So the Lord is trying to teach his people to go away with exactness and honor, if you will.
This small decision is going to lead to worse and worse decisions until Saul is completely off the cliff here.
I'm guessing that in a way that's one of the points in the military of teaching people marching and teaching people. and worse decisions until Saul is completely off the cliff here.
I'm guessing that in a way that's one of the points
in the military of teaching people marching and drills
and things like that, it's to accustomed for the idea
that in more way the issues than just marching down
the parade field when the order comes, you do it.
Because you don't want an army where everybody's saying,
you know, I don't know,
maybe I will try to take that bridge,
or maybe I won't.
Maybe my group will go north instead of south
or something like that.
I figured it would be okay.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't really feel like doing that today.
If you've ever been in an organization
where you have people working under you,
I can tell you, it's such a good feeling
when you have people that you can agree on
and assignment with, and you just know it'll be taken care of.
Don't have to think about it anymore.
That person, it will be done
because that person's really reliable,
and that's what you want,
and Saul doesn't prove reliable here.
And even I think that the idea of exactness,
but also the idea of will you keep a commandment,
whether or not it makes sense to you at the time.
It's the Adam thing.
I know not, save the Lord commanded me
and the sequence is nice.
Okay, then Adam had it explained to him,
but maybe we'll have that explained to us,
maybe we won't.
What will we do if it doesn't make sense to us?
It's a test.
There's a story that Harold Bealee told
about his childhood that I think is really interesting about him running out in a field in Idaho where he was growing up and
he came up to a fence that bounded the area that
That he was in and he suddenly heard a voice. He said it was it was as clear a voice as he had ever heard
There an audible voice that said do not climb the fence
And he said I looked around I couldn't see anybody.
Never did see anybody there. But he said, the voice was absolutely clear. And he said, so I turned
away and I didn't climb the fence. And he said, I don't know what was on the other side of the fence.
And I won't know in this life. And he said, but I didn't climb the fence. And I learned a lot
from that. If the voice comes and says, don't climb the fence, didn't climb the fence. And I learned a lot from that. If the voice comes and says, don't climb the fence,
don't climb the fence.
And I noticed that Samuel says, what have you done?
And Saul says, I saw the people.
They were scared, you know, it's not my fault.
It's their fault.
Yeah, he'll do that again when he pulls it again.
It's the people, the people kind of made me do it.
You know, not my fault.
Yeah, what if he just would have said, I did wrong. What have you done? And Saul said, I did wrong. Right, you know, I'm not my fault. Yeah, what if he just would have said, I did wrong.
What have you done?
And Saul said, I did wrong, you know, but this, I had to.
It was someone else's fault.
I think that covers a multitude of sins, I think,
quite often if we do something wrong, we just frankly acknowledge it.
You say, yeah, I'm sorry, that was a mistake.
I wasn't, I'm sorry, I won't do it again.
Then it can be overlooked, But if it begins to suggest
a pattern of behavior, I don't take responsibility and I make bad decisions and so on. Then people lose
confidence. The Lord loses confidence in you. I'm just looking at it because this is kind of the
turning point. And then it's going to continue later. I just was analyzing that turning point.
All right, let's keep going.
Yeah.
Chapter 14, the story of Jonathan smiting the garrison of the Philistines.
It's a curious story.
Jonathan sets off kind of an adventurous sort, you know, strapping young lad.
I'm guessing that if Saul was big, Jonathan might have been too, and he's been raised
to be a warrior as the son of the king, and
he goes over to take on a Philistine garrison, and he goes with just his armor bearer.
It says they discover themselves under the Philistines, that's Old King James English, for
they kind of reveal themselves.
They're not hiding anymore.
They stand right out, separated by some distance and say, here we are.
And the Israelites have been hiding under rocks and in caverns and things like that.
So the Philistines get a kick out of it.
And the Philistines are feeling pretty adequate to the case.
And they hear two jerks challenging us.
What's wrong with these two idiots?
And he says to his armor barrier,
if they say, stay there and we'll come to you,
then we'll stay here.
But if they say, come on over boys,
then we'll know that they've been delivered into our hands. And that's what they do. Verse
11, both of them discovered themselves under the garrison of the Philistines. And the Philistines
said, behold, this is such stately King James language. I think you have to understand
that it's probably not as stately behold the Hebrews come forth out of the holes where
they'd hid themselves. As luck, the Hebrews are forth out of the holes where they'd hid themselves.
As luck, the Hebrews are coming out of the holes they've been hiding in. We've had him intimidated.
Now these two guys have come out. And the men of the garrison answered Jonathan and his armor
bearer and said, come up to us and we will show you a thing. It's kind of like, come on over. We'll
teach you a lesson. We'll take care of you. And Jonathan said, okay, that was the sign I was looking for.
They've been delivered into our hands.
And he goes after them, they're very effective.
It causes a panic among the Philistines.
And the Philistines run and Saul sees it.
People can see the Philistines,
Garrison is melting away.
And so Saul calls for some auguring.
He wants an oracle to be taken.
Bring the ark over.
The ark was with them.
And so they check.
And then Paul Saul joins together
and they go into battle.
It's a spectacular route.
So the Lord saved Israel that day.
And the men of Israel were distressed that day,
though, for one reason.
Here's where another bad decision on the part
of Saul comes into play.
Saul had adured the people who were 24,
saying,
Chris would be the man that eateth any food until evening,
that I may be avenged on mine enemies.
And notice the way he personalizes it too.
It's mine enemies.
I should be avenged.
Me, me, me.
He issues this stupid rule.
It's a really hot day, probably.
And he says, nobody should eat.
And I'm guessing maybe nobody should drink
for the remainder of this day
until I've been thoroughly avenged on all my enemies.
But guess who didn't hear him make that oath?
That's a very solemn oath.
Jonathan didn't hear it
because he was out
fighting with the Philistines. He wasn't there. So it says along the way, you know, they've been
commanded not to eat, but Jonathan comes across a honeycomb. And he's hungry. And it's been a
long day of battle. He needs some calories. And so he eats a little bit of the honey, totally
innocently. And I mean, he's the hero of the day. And yet
he's violated his dad's command. And this shows, by the way, kind of a stupidly literalistic
way of understanding a command. I mean, most of us would say reasonably, well, look,
if he didn't hear it, he's not guilty of violating it. But Saul won't give him that way
out. And so Jonathan says, he responds to this when they tell him,
you know, your father, you father put the people under a note
that they not eat anything today.
And Jonathan says, Jonathan comes out of this so often
as the better man than his father.
Saul, especially, Saul becomes worse.
But Jonathan says, my father hath troubled the land.
What he's saying is, this is a bad decision on my dad's part.
You know, look what it did for me. I mean, I got some calories in me. You wouldn't think
of those modern terms because I've eaten something. I feel better. I've got a little more energy now
and we can carry on with the battle. He said, you know, see how much better if the people
have been able to eat today, if the food that they came across and the camp of the Philistines,
that they would have been more effective rather than less, and so they have a tremendous victory than the people go out of control.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
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