The Bible Recap - Day 102 (1 Samuel 15-17) - Year 5
Episode Date: April 12, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - Win a trip to Israel! - C...heck out WayFM’s Prayer Wall FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Exodus 17:8-16 - Deuteronomy 25:19 - 1 Samuel 30 - 1 Samuel 14:52 - Pre-order my Israel book HERE! SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Remember the Amalekites?
They were the first people to attack Israel when they were in the wilderness, way back in
Exodus 17.
In Deuteronomy 25, God commanded Israel to blot out the memory of Amalek from under heaven.
The Israelites were supposed to completely wipe them out and kill all living things.
But that still hasn't happened.
So maybe now that Israel has a king, they can pull it off?
Samuel charges Saul with the task.
Saul and his army win the battle, but he takes the king alive, as well as a lot of animals. And even though he claims total victory,
we'll see later on in chapter 30
that there are still several hundred people alive
among the Amalakites.
So Saul's obedience is far from thorough here.
He opts for selective obedience instead of complete obedience,
which serves as further evidence
that he's unsuitable as Israel's king.
God speaks to Samuel about Saul's kingship,
and a lot of translations use the word regret, here saying God regretted making Saul king.
But then later in verse 29, we see that God can't regret things, so which is it?
The word used can also be translated as to be grieved, so it's possible to read it as God was
grieved over the fact that he made Saul king.
God is not saying he made the wrong choice. He said all along how this choice would go for Israel, and now he's showing that it went exactly as he said, and he's grieved over that.
Samuel shares God's righteous anger.
The next day, Samuel goes to confront Saul, and he finds out that Saul has set up a monument to himself, not God.
And as Saul is telling Samuel all about what a great job he did obeying God, there are
two noteworthy things happening.
First, he keeps referring to Yahweh as your God, not my God or our God.
And second, Samuel can hear animal noises.
So he asks Saul about it it and Saul doesn't repent.
Instead, he tells a series of lies about why the animals are there.
I obeyed. I disobeyed, but it was for a good reason.
The people were actually the ones who disobeyed.
Samuel shuts him down.
He says that sacrifices aren't a replacement for obedience.
Then Samuel points out that every time Saul does his own thing,
it's as bad as if he were following a false God.
Saul has become his own God.
And since Saul, as the leader of Yahweh's people, has rejected Yahweh,
the Yahweh has rejected him as leader of his people.
God has raised up a new king.
When Saul hears this, he confesses because now he's feeling the pinch,
but he seems to only respond to consequences.
Then Samuel has to go finish Saul's job for him. He personally kills Agag the king of the
Amalakites, but the whole thing really messes Samuel up. It seems like he kind of feels responsible
for all this. God tells Samuel it's all going to work out and that he'll even have a part to play
in that. In fact, he gets to anoint the new king.
So he goes to Bethlehem and finds Jesse,
who is the grandson of Ruth and Boaz, by the way.
He meets all of Jesse's sons and God says no to all of them,
even the tall one.
If you recall, Saul's appearance was his biggest selling point
and things didn't go well.
So this time around, God emphasizes
that the choice will be about character and integrity,
not in seam. Finally, God emphasizes that the choice will be about character and integrity, not in seam.
Finally, God gives the thumbs up to David, the youngest son,
who is late to the scene because he's at work
on the family farm.
Samuel privately anoints David to be king,
just like he'd done with Saul.
Then an interesting thing happens.
God the Spirit leaves Saul and comes to David.
As we've talked about before, in the Old Testament,
God the Spirit moved around a lot.
He was always described as being on or over people,
and he primarily shows up to equip and empower
someone for a specific task.
So now that Saul's time on the throne
is being brought to an end,
and David is being raised up,
this is a natural transition of the Spirit's location
and empowerment.
After God the Spirit leaves Saul,
God the Father sends a harmful Spirit to Saul.
It's important to note two things here.
First, God is never the active agent of evil.
He never does it himself,
but he does use the work of evil spirits to his own ends.
Second, I always think it's encouraging to remember
that evil is still subject to God's sovereignty and authority.
Saul's servants notice that something is off with him, and they suggest hiring a musician,
specifically David.
Any time David comes to play the harmful spirit leaves.
This could have been happening at God's command in order to grant David favor with Saul,
or it's also possible that the evil spirit was tormented by being in the same room where
Yahweh was being worshipipped through David's songs.
Who knows?
Around this time, the Philistines are back again trying to fight for more land.
They're doing a unique kind of battle where each side picks their strongest man and
the side of the winner takes all.
It would be like if the NBA playoffs were replaced with a slam-dun contest.
Speaking of height, the Philistines have this giant,
Goliath, who is probably nine, nine, approximately.
And as we've mentioned, the average Israelite at this time
was roughly five and a half feet tall.
Goliath's armor alone probably weighed as much
as the average Israelite.
Three of David's older brothers are fighting in this war,
or to be more precise, sitting on the hill
waiting in this war, because no one more precise, sitting on the hill waiting in this war,
because no one is stepping up to fight Goliath.
Meanwhile, David is commuting between two jobs,
playing the harp for the king and running the family farm.
Then one day, his dad is like,
hey, you don't have a lot going on, right?
Can you take some lunch to your brothers
who've been sitting on a hill for the past six weeks?
Ever the diligent servant, David does.
He arrives at the battlefield
just in time to hear Goliath mocking Israel, and he asks about the reward for beating this
guy. Word gets back to Saul that someone has asked about the reward, but when Saul sees
who it is, he's like, the harpist? Oh man, that's cute, but no. And David tells him,
I'm not just a harpist, I'm a shepherd at my other job, and I've killed lions and bears
with my hands. I can do the same with this guy who's mocking us and our God.
Saul's like, well, you're all I've got.
God's beat.
David has an unconventional approach to battle.
He rejects armor and just goes with what he knows,
a sling and an incredibly powerful battle cry.
Seriously, it's saturated with faith in God.
Go back and read it again.
David stands in stark contrast to Saul, who is eaten up with fear. David kills Goliath with one swing of a slingshot, decapitates him with his own sword, then keeps his head as a trophy.
After this, Saul takes a lot more interest in David. Suddenly, he's not just the harpist. Saul
wants to know all about him, just like we read yesterday in 1452, which says,
When Saul saw any strong man or any valiant man, he attached him to himself.
And it may sound great for the king to attach you to himself, but probably not if that king
is tormented by a demon. Stick around to see how that goes. In the meantime, what was your God shot?
Stick around to see how that goes. In the meantime, what was your God shot?
I loved the reminder that God has emotions, like when He was grieved over making Saul
King.
Even though God knows everything and is outside of time, He's still in time as well.
He's in each moment with us.
He hated that things were happening the way they were with Saul, even though He said it
in motion and knew it would all work out smoothly in the end.
You've probably felt this way over tough decisions you've made as well.
You have to punish your child, but you hate having to do it, but you know it's good and
right and that it will be better in the long run.
This thought makes me never want to offer trite platitudes to people who are struggling, because
now it's easy for me to imagine God grieving with them in that moment.
The fact that he has emotions about things, that he's not removed and distant and unaffected,
it draws me to him all the more. I want to bring him joy, not grief. He's certainly done that for me.
I say it all the time and it's still true. He's where the joy is.
all the time and it's still true. He's where the joy is.
It's almost here.
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If you haven't already, you can pre-order your copy on Amazon, or bakerbookhouse.com,
or even our website, thebibelrecap.com.
Click on the link in the show notes to pre-order.
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Thank you, and Shalom.
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