DAVID'S CONFLICT WITH GOLIATH
1Sa 17:1-58.
THESE irrepressible Philistines were never long recovering from
their disasters. The victory of Jonathan had been impaired by the
exhaustion of the soldiers, caused by Saul's fast preventing them
from pursuing the enemy as far, and destroying their force as
thoroughly, as they might have done. A new attack was organized
against Israel, headed by a champion, Goliath of Gath, whose height
must have approached the extraordinary stature of ten feet. Against
this army Saul arrayed his force, and the two armies fronted each
other on opposite sides of the valley of Elah. This valley has
generally been identified with that which now bears the name of
Wady-es-Sumt - a valley running down from the plateau of Judah to
the Philistine plain, not more than perhaps eight or ten miles from
Bethlehem. The Philistine champion appears to have been a man of
physical strength corresponding to the massiveness of his body. The
weight of his coat of mail is estimated at more than one hundred and
fifty pounds, and the head of his spear eighteen pounds. Remembering
the extraordinary feats of Samson, the Philistines might well fancy
that it was new their turn to boast of a Hercules. Day after day
Goliath presented himself before the army of Israel, calling proudly
for a foeman worthy of his steel, and demanding that in default of
any one able to fight with him and kill him, the Israelites should
abandon all dream of independence, and become vassals of the
Philistines. And morning and evening, for nearly six weeks, had this
proud challenge been given, but never once accepted. Even Jonathan,
who had faith enough and courage enough and skill enough for so
much, seems to have felt himself helpless in this great dilemma. The
explanation that has sometimes been given of his abstention, that it
was not etiquette for a king's son to engage in fight with a
commoner, can hardly hold water; Jonathan showed no such
squeamishness at Michmash; and besides, in cases of desperation
etiquette has to be thrown to the winds. Of the host of Israel, we
read simply that they were dismayed. Nor does Saul seem to have
renewed the attempt to get counsel of God after his experience on
the day of Jonathan's victory. The Israelites could only look on in
grim humiliation, sullenly guarding the pass by the valley into
their territories, but returning a silent refusal to the demand of
the Philistines either to furnish a champion or to become their
servants.
The coming of David upon the scene corresponded in its accidental
character to the coming of Saul into contact with Samuel, to be
designated for the throne. Everything seemed to be casual, yet those
things which seemed most casual were really links in a providential
chain leading to the gravest issues. It seemed to be by chance that
David had three brothers serving in Saul's army; it seemed also to
be by chance that their father sent his youthful shepherd son to
inquire after their welfare; it was not by design that as he saluted
his brethren Goliath came up and David heard his words of defiance;
still less was it on purpose to wait for David that Saul had sent no
one out as yet to encounter the Philistine; and nothing could have
appeared more ridiculous than that the challenge should wait to be
answered by the stripling shepherd, who, with his sling and
shepherd's bag thrown over his shoulder, had so little of the
appearance of a man of war. It seemed very accidental, too, that the
only part of the giant's person that was not thoroughly defended by
his armour, his eyes and a morsel of his forehead above them, was
the only part of him on which a small stone from a sling could have
inflicted a fatal injury. But obviously all these were parts of the
providential plan by which David was at once to confer on his
country a signal boon, and to raise his name to the pinnacle of
fame. And, as usual, all the parts of this pre-arranged plan fell
out without constraint or interference; a new proof that Divine
pre-ordination does not impair the liberty of man.
One cannot but wonder whether, in offering his prayers that morning,
David had any presentiment of the trial that awaited him, anything
to impel him to unwonted fervour in asking God that day to establish
the works of his hands upon him. There is no reason to think that he
had. His prayers that morning were in all likelihood his usual
prayers. And if he was sincere in the expression of his own sense of
weakness, and in his supplication that God would strengthen him for
all the day's duties, it was enough. Oh! how little we know what may
be before us, on some morning that dawns on us just as other days,
but which is to form a great crisis in our life. How little the boy
that is to tell his first lie that day thinks of the serpent that is
lying in wait for him I How little the girl that is to fall in with
her betrayer thinks of the snare preparing for her body and her
soul! How little the party that are to be upset in the pleasure boat
and consigned to a watery grave think how the day is to end! Should
we not pray more really, more earnestly if we did realize these
possibilities? True, indeed, the future is hid from us, and we do
not usually experience the impulse to earnestness which it would
impart. But is it not a good habit, as you kneel each morning, to
think, "For aught I know, this may be the most important day of my
life. The opportunity may be given me of doing a great service in
the cause of truth and righteousness; or the temptation may assail
me to deny my Lord and ruin my soul. O God, be not far from me this
day; prepare me for all that Thou preparest for me!"
The distance from Bethlehem being but a few hours walk, David
starting in the morning would arrive early in the day at the
quarters of the army. When he heard the challenge of the Philistine
he was astonished to find that no one had taken it up. There was a
mystery about this, about the cowardice of his countrymen, perhaps
about the attitude of Jonathan, that he could not solve.
Accordingly, with all that earnestness and curiosity with which one
peers into all the circumstances surrounding a mystery, he asked,
what encouragement there was to volunteer, what reward was any one
to receive who should kill this Philistine? Not that he personally
was caring about the reward, but he wished to solve the mystery. It
is evident that the consideration that moved David himself was that
the Philistine had defied the armies of the living God. It was the
same arrogant claim to be above the God of Israel, which had puffed
up their minds when they took possession of the ark and placed it in
the temple of their god. "You thought so that day," David might
mutter, ''but what did you think next morning, when the mutilated
image of your god lay prostrate on the floor? Please God, your
sensations to-morrow, yea, this very fore-noon, shall be such as
they were then." The spirit of faith started into full and high
activity, and the same kind of inspiration that had impelled
Jonathan to climb into the garrison at Michmash now impelled David
to vindicate the blasphemed name of Jehovah. Was it the flash of
this inspiration in his eye, was it the tone of it in his voice, was
it the consciousness that something desperate was to follow in the
way of personal faith and daring, that roused the temper of Eliab,
and drew from him a withering rebuke of the presumption of the
stripling that dared to meddle with such matters? Eliab certainly
did not spare him. Elder brothers are seldom remiss in rebuking the
presumption of younger. "Why camest thou down hither? And with whom
hast thou left those few sheep in the wilderness? I know thy pride
and the naughtiness of thy heart; for thou art come down that thou
mightest see the battle." Irritating though such language was, it
was borne with admirable meekness. "What have I now done? Is there
not a cause?" "He that ruleth his spirit is greater than he that
taketh a city." Eliab showed himself defeated by his own temper, a
most mortifying defeat; David held his temper firmly in command.
Which was the greater, which the better man? And the short question
he put to Eliab was singularly apt, ''Is there not a cause?" When
all you men of war are standing helpless and perplexed in the face
of this great national insult, is there not a cause why I should
inquire into the matter, if, by God's help, I can do any- thing for
my God and my people?
Undaunted by his brother's volley, he turned to someone else, and
obtained a similar answer to his questions. Inspiration is a rapid
process, and the course for him to pursue was now fully determined
upon. His indignant tone and confident reliance on the God of
Israel, so unlike the tone of everyone else excited the attention of
the bystanders; they rehearsed his words to Saul, and Saul sent for
him. And when he came to Saul, there was not the slightest trace of
fear or faintheartedness about him. ''Let no man's heart fail
because of him; thy servant will go and fight with this Philistine."
Brave words, but, as Saul thinks, very foolish. ''You go and fight
with the Philistine? you a mere shepherd boy, who never knew the
brunt of battle, and he a man of war from his youth?" Yes Saul, that
is just the way for you to speak, with your earthly way of viewing
things; you, who measure strength only by a carnal standard, who
know nothing of the faith that removes mountains, who forget the
meaning of the name ISRA-EL, and never spent an hour as Jacob spent
his night at Peniel! Listen to the reply of faith. ''And David said
unto Saul Thy servant kept his father's sheep, and there came a lion
and a bear, and took a lamb out of the flock; and I went out after
him and smote him, and delivered it out of his mouth; and when he
arose against me I caught him by his beard, and smote him and slew
him Thy servant slew both the lion and the bear; and this
uncircumcised Philistine shall be as one of them, seeing he hath
defied the armies of the living God. David said moreover, The Lord
that delivered me out of the paw of the lion, and out of the paw of
the bear. He will deliver me out of the hand of this Philistine."
Could there have been a nobler exercise of faith, a finer instance
of a human spirit taking hold of the Invisible; fortifying itself
against material perils by realizing the help of an unseen God;
resting on His sure word as on solid rock; flinging itself
fearlessly on a very sea of dangers; confident of protection and
victory from Him? The only help to faith was the remembrance of the
encounter with the lion and the bear, and the assurance that the
same gracious help would be vouchsafed now. But no heart that was
not full of faith would have thought of that, either as an evidence
that God worked by him then, or as a sure pledge that God would work
by him now. How many m adventurer or sportsman, that in some
encounter with wild animals has escaped death by the very skin of
his teeth, thinks only of his luck, or the happiness of the thought
that led him to do so and so in what seemed the very article of
death? A deliverance of this kind is no security against a like
deliverance afterwards; it can give nothing more than a hope of
escape. The faith of David recognized God's merciful hand in the
first deliverance, and that gave an assurance of it in the other.
What! would that God that had helped him to rescue a lamb fail him
while trying to rescue a nation? Would that God that had sustained
him when all that was involved was a trifling loss to his father
fail him in a combat that involved the salvation of Israel and the
honour of Israel's God? Would He who had subdued for him the lion
and the bear when they were but obeying the instincts of their
nature, humiliate him in conflict with one who was defying the
armies of the living God? The remembrance of this deliverance
confirmed his faith and urged him to the conflict, and the victory
which faith thus gained was complete. It swept the decks clear of
every vestige of terror; it went right to the danger, without a
particle of misgiving.
There are two ways in which faith may assert its supremacy. One,
afterwards very familiar to David, is, when it has first to struggle
hard with distrust and fear; when it has to come to close quarters
with the suggestions of the carnal mind, grapple with these in
mortal conflict, strangle them, and rise up victorious over them.
For most men, most believing men, it is only thus that faith rises
to her throne. The other way is, to spring to her throne in a
moment; to assert her authority, free and independent, utterly
regardless of all that would hamper her, as free from doubt and
misgiving as a little child in his father's arms, conscious that
whatever is needed that father will provide. It was this simple,
child-like, but most triumphant exercise of faith that David showed
in undertaking this conflict. Happy they who are privileged with
such an attainment! Only let us beware of despairing if we cannot
attain to this prompt, instinctive faith. Let us fall back with
patience on that other process where we have to fight in the first
instance with our fears and misgivings, driving them from us as
David had often to do afterwards: ''Why art thou cast down, O my
soul, and why art thou disquieted in me? Hope in God, for I will yet
praise Him who is the health of my countenance and my God."
And now David prepared himself for the contest Saul, ever carnal,
and trusting only in carnal devices, is fain to clothe him in his
armour, and David makes trial of his coat of mail; but he is
embarrassed by a heavy covering to which he is not accustomed, and
which only impedes the freedom of his arm. It is plain enough that
it is not in Saul's panoply that he can meet the Philistine. He must
fall back on simpler means. Choosing five smooth stones out of the
brook, with his shepherd's staff in one hand and his sling in the
other, he drew near to the Philistine. When Goliath saw him no words
were bitter enough for his scorn. He had sought a warrior to fight
with; he gets a boy to annihilate. It is a paltry business. "Come to
me, and I will give thy flesh to the fowls of the air and to the
beasts of the fields." ''Thus saith the Lord, Let not the wise man
glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his might."
Was ever such proof given of the sin and folly of boasting as in the
case of Goliath? And yet, as we should say, how natural it was for
Goliath! But pride goeth before destruction, and a haughty spirit
before a fall. In the spiritual conflict it is the surest presage of
defeat. It was the Goliath spirit that puffed up St. Peter when he
said to his Master, ''Lord, I will go with Thee to prison and to
death." It is the same spirit against which St. Paul gives his
remarkable warning, "Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed
lest he fall." Can it be said that it is a spirit that Churches are
always free from? Are they never tempted to boast of the talents of
their leading men, the success of their movements, and their growing
power and influence in the community? And does not God in His
providence constantly show the sin and folly of such boasting?
''Because thou sayest, I am rich and increased with goods, and have
need of nothing, and knowest not that thou art wretched, and
miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked."
In beautiful contrast with the scornful self-confidence of Goliath
was the simplicity of spirit and the meek, humble reliance on God,
apparent in David's answer: "Thou comest to me with a sword, and
with a spear, and with a shield; but I come to thee in the name of
the Lord of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom thou hast
defied. This day will the Lord deliver thee into my hand; and I will
smite thee, and take thine head from thee; and I will give the
carcasses of the Philistines this day to the fowls of the air and to
the wild beasts of the earth, that all the earth may know that there
is a God in Israel. And all this assembly shall know that the Lord
saveth not with sword and spear; for the battle is the Lord's, and
He will give you into our hand."
What a reality God was to David! He advanced "as seeing Him who is
invisible." Guided by the wisdom of God, he chose his method of
attack, with all the simplicity and certainty of genius. Conscious
that God was with him, he fearlessly met the enemy. A man of less
faith might have been too nervous to take the proper aim.
Undisturbed by any fear of missing, David hurls the stone from his
sling, hits the giant on the unprotected part of his forehead, and
in a moment has him reeling on the ground. Advancing to his
prostrate foe, he seizes his sword, cuts off his head, and affords
to both friends and foes unmistakable evidence that his opponent is
dead. Rushing from their tents, the, Philistines fly towards their
own country, hotly pursued by the Israelites. It was in these
pursuits of flying foes that the greatest slaughter occurred in
those Eastern countries, and the whole road was strewn with the dead
bodies of the foe to the very gates of Ekron and Gaza. In this
pursuit, however, David did not mingle. With the head of the
Philistine in his hands, he came to Saul. It is said that afterwards
he took the head of Goliath to Jerusalem, which was then occupied,
at least in part, by the Benjamites (Jdg 1:21), though the
Stronghold of Zion was in the hands of the Jebusites (2Sa 5:7). We
do not know why Jerusalem was chosen for depositing this ghastly
trophy. All that it is necessary to say in relation to this is, that
seeing it was only the stronghold of Zion that is said to have been
held by the Jebusites, there is no ground for the objection which
some critics have taken to the narrative that it cannot be correct,
since Jerusalem was not yet in the hands of the Israelites.
It cannot be doubted that David continued to hold the same
conviction as before the battle, that it was not he that conquered,
but God. We cannot doubt that after the battle he showed the same
meek and humble spirit as before. Whatever surprise his victory
might be to the tens of thousands who witnessed it, it was no
surprise to him. He knew beforehand that he could trust God, and the
result showed that he was right. But that very spirit of implicit
trust in God by which he was so thoroughly influenced kept him from
taking any of the glory to himself. God had chosen him to be His
instrument, but he had no credit from the victory for himself. His
feeling that day was the very same as his feeling at the close of
his military life, when the Lord had delivered him out of the hand
of all his enemies: - "The Lord is my rock, my fortress, and my
deliverer; the God of my rock, in Him will I trust; He is my shield
and the horn of my salvation, my high tower and my refuge, my
saviour; Thou savest me from violence."
While David was preparing to fight with the Philistine, Saul asked
Abner whose son he was. Strange to say, neither Abner nor anyone
else could tell. Nor could the question be answered till David came
back from his victory, and told the king that he was the son of
Jesse the Bethlehemite. We have already remarked that it was strange
that Saul should not have recognized him, inasmuch as he had
formerly given attendance on the king to drive away his evil spirit
by means of his harp. In explanation it has been urged by some that
David's visit or visits to Saul at that time may have been very
brief, and as years may have elapsed since his last visit, his
appearance may have so changed as to prevent recognition. On the
part of others, another explanation has been offered. Saul may have
recognized David at first, but he did not know his family. Now that
there was a probability of his becoming the king's son-in-law, it
was natural that Saul should be anxious to know his connections. The
question put to Abner was, Whose son is this youth? The commission
given to him was to enquire "whose son the stripling is." And the
information given by David was, "I am the son of thy servant Jesse
the Bethlehemite." It may be added that there is some difficulty
about the text of this chapter. It seems as if somehow two
independent accounts of David had been mixed together. And in one
important version of the Septuagint several passages that occur in
the received text are omitted, certainly with the result of removing
some difficulties as the passage stands.
It is not possible to read this chapter without some thought of the
typical character of David, and indeed the typical aspect of the
conflict in which he was now engaged. We find an emblematic picture
of the conquest of Messiah and His Church. The self-confident
boasting of the giant, strong in the resources of carnal might, and
incapable of appreciating the unseen and invincible power of a
righteous man in a righteous cause, is precisely the spirit in which
opposition to Christ has been usually given, "Let us break their
bands asunder, and cast away their cords from us." The contempt
shown for the lowly appearance of David, the undisguised scorn at
the notion that through such a stripling any deliverance could come
to his people, has its counterpart in the feeling towards Christ and
His Gospel to which the Apostle alludes: "We preach Christ
crucified, to the Jews a stumbling-block, and to the Greeks
foolishness." The calm self-possession of David, the choice of
simple but suitable means, and the thorough reliance on Jehovah
which enabled him to conquer, were all exemplified, in far higher
measure, in the moral victories of Jesus, and they are still the
weapons which enable His people to overcome. The sword of Goliath
turned against himself, the weapon by which he was to annihilate his
foe, employed by that very foe to sever his head from his body, was
an emblem of Satan's weapons turned by Christ against Satan,
"through death he destroyed him that had the power of death, and
delivered them who all their lifetime were subject to bondage." The
representative character of David, fighting, not for himself alone
but the whole nation, was analogous to the representative character
of Christ. And the shout that burst from the ranks of Israel and
Judah when they saw the champion of the Philistines fall, and the
enemy betake themselves in consternation to flight, foreshadowed the
joy of redeemed men when the reality of Christ's salvation flashes
on their hearts, and they see the enemies that have been harassing
them repulsed and scattered - a joy to be immeasurably magnified
when all enemies are finally conquered, and the loud voice is heard
in heaven, "Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of
our God and the power of His Christ; for the accuser of our brethren
is cast down, that accused them before our God day and night."
Lastly, while we are instructed by the study of this conflict, let
us be animated by it too. Let us learn never to quail at carnal
might arrayed against the cause of God. Let us never fear to attack
sin, however apparently invincible it may be. Be it sin within or
sin without, sin in our hearts or sin in the world, let us go boldly
at it, strong in the might of God. That God who delivered David from
the paw of the wild beast, and from the power of the giant, will
make us more than conquerors - will enable us to spoil
"principalities and powers and triumph openly over them."
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