Verse 1
1 Samuel 12:1. Samuel said unto
all Israel — While they were
assembled together in Gilgal.
And this is another instance of
Samuel’s great wisdom and
integrity. He would not reprove
the people for their sin, in
desiring a king, while Saul was
unsettled in his kingdom; lest,
through their accustomed levity,
they should as hastily cast off
their king, as they had
passionately desired him; and
therefore he chooseth this
season for it, because Saul’s
kingdom was now confirmed by an
eminent victory, and because the
people rejoiced greatly,
applauded themselves for their
desires of a king, and
interpreted the success which
God had given them as a divine
approbation of those desires.
Samuel, therefore, thinks fit to
temper their joys, and to excite
them to that repentance which he
saw wanting in them, and which
he knew to be necessary to
prevent the curse of God upon
their new king and the whole
kingdom.
Verse 2
1 Samuel 12:2. The king walketh
before you — Ruleth over you. To
him I have fully resigned my
power, and own myself one of his
subjects. I am old — And
therefore unable to bear the
burden of government. My sons
are with you — Or, among you, in
the same state, private persons,
as you are; if they have injured
any of you, the law is now open
against them; any of you may
accuse them, your king can
punish them, I do not intercede
for them. Walked before you —
That is, been your guide and
governor; partly, as a prophet;
and partly, as a judge.
Verse 3
1 Samuel 12:3. Behold, here I am
— I here present myself before
the Lord, and before your king,
ready to give an account of all
my administrations. And this
protestation Samuel makes of his
integrity, not out of
ostentation, but for his own
just vindication, that the
people might not hereafter, for
the defence of their own
irregularities, reproach his
government; and that, being
publicly acquitted from all
faults in his government, he
might more freely reprove the
sins of the people, and
particularly that sin of theirs
in desiring a king, when they
had so little reason for it.
Verse 5
1 Samuel 12:5. The Lord is
witness — There cannot be a
stronger or more amiable picture
of integrity than we have in
this speech of Samuel. Who can
read it without feeling his
heart touched with admiration of
his character? Happy Samuel, who
could thus call a whole kingdom
to bear witness to his
uprightness! Strange, infatuated
people, that could wish to
change such a governor for a
king possessed of absolute
power!
Verse 7
1 Samuel 12:7. Now, therefore,
stand still — Having obtained an
honourable testimony from them
as to his own conduct, he would
not dismiss them till he had
represented to them the great
benefits which they had received
from God, and their ingratitude
to him. Of all the righteous
acts of the Lord — Hebrews the
righteousnesses; that is,
mercies or benefits, the chief
subject of the following
discourse; some of their
calamities being but briefly
named, and that for the
illustration of God’s mercy in
their deliverances.
Verse 8
1 Samuel 12:8. Made them dwell
in this place — In this land: in
which Moses and Aaron are said
to settle them; because they
brought them into, and seated
them in part of it, that without
Jordan; because they were, under
God, the principal authors of
their entering into the land of
Canaan; inasmuch as they brought
them out of Egypt, conducted
them through the wilderness, and
there, by their prayers to God,
and counsels to them, preserved
them from ruin, and gave command
from God for the distribution of
the land among them, and
encouraged them to enter into
it. And, lastly, Moses
substituted Joshua in his stead,
and commanded him to seat them
there, which he did.
Verse 9
1 Samuel 12:9. They forgat the
Lord — That is, they revolted
from him, and carried themselves
as if they had wholly forgotten
his innumerable favours. This he
says to answer an objection,
that the reason why they desired
a king was, because in the time
of the judges they were at great
uncertainties, and often
exercised with sharp
afflictions: to which he
answereth by concession that
they were so; but adds, that
they themselves were the cause
of it, by their forgetting God:
so that it was not the fault of
that kind of government, but
their transgressing the rules of
it. Fought — With success, and
subdued them.
Verse 11
1 Samuel 12:11. And Bedan — We
have no mention of Bedan in the
book of Judges or elsewhere
before, and therefore many
commentators think this is
another name for Barak. Others,
however, think Samson to be the
person here meant, being here
called Ben-Dan, the son of Dan,
or Be-Dan, that is, in or of
Dan, because he was of that
tribe, and to signify that they
had no reason to distrust God,
who could raise so eminent a
saviour out of so obscure a
tribe. And ye dwelled safe — So
that it was not necessity, but
mere wantonness, that made you
desire a change.
Verse 12
1 Samuel 12:12. When ye saw that
Nahash came against you, &c. —
From this it appears that Nahash
had levied war against them some
time before he came against
Jabesh-gilead, as mentioned in
the foregoing chapter; and that
they took occasion from thence
to demand a king, as being
fearful and impatient of staying
till God should raise them up a
deliverer, or command Samuel,
who was their judge, to go out
to fight against him. When the
Lord your God was your king —
That is, when God was your
immediate king and governor, who
was both able and willing to
deliver you, if you had cried to
him, whereof you and your
ancestors have had plentiful
experience; so that you did not
at all need any other king; and
your desire of another was a
manifest reproach against God.
Verse 13
1 Samuel 12:13. Behold the king
whom ye have chosen — Though God
chose him by lot, yet the people
are said to choose him; either
generally, because they chose
that form of government; or
particularly, because they
approved of God’s choice, and
confirmed it. The Lord hath set
a king ever you — He hath
yielded to your inordinate
desire.
Verse 14
1 Samuel 12:14. Then, &c. —
Hebrew, then shall ye be (that
is, walk, or go) after the Lord;
that is, God shall still go
before you, as he hath hitherto
done, as your leader or
governor, to direct, protect,
and deliver you; and he will not
forsake you, as you have given
him just cause to do. Sometimes
this phrase of going after the
Lord, signifies a man’s
obedience to God; but here it is
otherwise to be understood, and
denotes not a duty to be
performed, but a privilege to be
received upon the performance of
their duty; because it is
opposed to a threatening
denounced in case of
disobedience, in the next verse.
Verse 15
1 Samuel 12:15. As it was
against your fathers — Who lived
under the judges; and you shall
have no advantage by the change
of government, nor shall your
kings be able to protect you
against God’s displeasure. We
mistake, if we think we can
evade God’s justice by shaking
off his dominion. If we will not
let God rule us, yet he will
judge us.
Verse 17
1 Samuel 12:17. Is it not
wheat-harvest to-day? — At which
time it was a rare thing in
those parts to have thunder or
rain; the weather being more
constant in its seasons than it
is with us, and the rain being
wont to fall periodically, only
in the autumn and the spring,
called the former and latter
rain. He shall send thunder and
rain — That you may understand
that God is displeased with you,
and see how foolishly and
wickedly you have acted, in
rejecting the government of that
God at whose command are all
things, both in heaven and in
earth.
Verse 18
1 Samuel 12:18. The Lord sent
thunder and rain — Such was the
power and favour with God that
this man of God possessed! By
this thunder and rain, God
showed them their folly in
desiring a king to save them,
rather than God or Samuel,
expecting more from an arm of
flesh than from the arm of God,
or from the power of prayer.
Could their king thunder with a
voice like God? Could their
prince command such forces as
the prophet could by his
prayers? Likewise he intimates,
that how serene soever their
condition was now, (like the
weather in wheat-harvest,) yet
if God pleased he could soon
change the face of the heavens,
and persecute them with his
storms.
Verses 19-21
1 Samuel 12:19-21. The Lord thy
God — Whom thou hast so great an
interest in, while we are
ashamed and afraid to call him
our God. Fear not — With a
desponding fear, as if there are
no hope left for you. But turn
not ye aside — After idols, as
they had often done before, and,
notwithstanding this warning,
did afterward. Vain things — So
idols are called Deuteronomy
32:21, Jeremiah 2:5; and so they
are, being mere nothings, having
no power in them, no influence
upon us, nor being of any use or
benefit to us.
Verse 22
1 Samuel 12:22. His name’s sake
— That is, for his own honour,
which would suffer much among
men, if he should not preserve
and deliver his people in
imminent dangers. And this
reason God allegeth, to take
them off from all conceit of
their own merit; and to assure
them, that if they did truly
repent of all their sins, and
serve God with all their hearts,
yet even in that case their
salvation would not be due to
their merits, but the effect of
God’s free mercy. To make you
his people — Out of his own free
grace, without any desert of
yours, and therefore he will not
forsake you, except you thrust
him away.
Verse 24
1 Samuel 12:24. Only fear the
Lord, and serve him with truth,
&c. — Otherwise neither my
prayers nor counsels will stand
you in any stead. Thus we see
that amidst all the changes of
the Hebrew state, their prophets
steadily inculcated one and the
same great principle, namely,
that of fearing and serving the
one true and living God, in
spirit and in truth. Whether
Moses or Joshua, the elders, or
judges, or kings, were their
governors, this great point was
kept in view, and pursued still.
And this indeed was the end of
the Divine Providence in
selecting this people: to
preserve and spread among
mankind the knowledge and
worship of the true God, and
obedience to his will, was the
great point in view, in the
divine counsels, in all that was
done to and for the Israelites.
And this great purpose,
notwithstanding all their
revolts and rebellions, was
still carried on, at least in a
measure, and accomplished. |