Verse 1
1 Samuel 23:1. Then they told —
Or rather, Now they had told
David. For it is evident from 1
Samuel 23:6, that David had
received the information here
referred to, and had even
delivered the inhabitants of
Keilah before Abiathar came to
tell him of the slaughter of the
priests. The Philistines fight
against Keilah — Probably the
Philistines were encouraged to
make this inroad into the land
of Israel by hearing that David
was forced to flee his country,
and that God had departed from
Saul. When princes begin to
persecute God’s people and
ministers, let them expect
nothing but vexation on all
sides. Keilah was a city in the
tribe of Judah, Joshua 15:44.
They rob the thrashing-floors —
Which were commonly without
their cities, for the
convenience of wind, to separate
the chaff from the corn. See
Ruth 3:2.
Verse 2
1 Samuel 23:2. David inquired of
the Lord — In what way he made
inquiry is not certain, as it
seems from 1 Samuel 23:6 that
Abiathar had not yet brought to
David the sacred ephod, with all
things belonging to it that were
made use of in consulting God.
Shall I go and smite these
Philistines? — We have here a
remarkable instance of David’s
love to his country; unto which
he did not become an enemy when
he was banished from it. On the
contrary, he hasted to its
assistance unsolicited. This
action of David’s, in going to
the relief of Keilah, is one of
the most extraordinary ones
recorded in history. “Another
man, in David’s place, would
have rejoiced at this invasion,
and perhaps encouraged it; and
this both from self-preservation
and policy; first, because he
had nothing to fear for himself,
while Saul had such an enemy
upon his hands; and secondly,
because the distress of his
country was the likeliest means
to bring Saul to reason, and
force him to recall, and be
reconciled to, his best
champion. But David was governed
by other than these narrow
views; nor safety nor honour was
desirable to him, purchased by
the distress of his country and
his friends. His bosom beat with
an eager desire to relieve
Keilah; but it was not an
adventure to be unadvisedly
undertaken; and therefore he
inquired of God, saying, Shall I
go and smite these Philistines?
This is one of those passages of
Scripture that give evidence of
their own truth. None but a hero
could put the question; and none
but God could resolve it: And
the Lord said unto David. Go,
and smite the Philistines, and
save Keilah.” — Delaney.
Verse 3-4
1 Samuel 23:3-4. David’s men
said, Behold, we are afraid here
in Judah — “They had more than
difficulty enough to defend
themselves against Saul where
they were; and could it be less
than madness to provoke more and
greater enemies? Doubtless Saul
would send forces to beat off
the Philistines, and then they
should be pent in between two
hostile armies. And yet,
notwithstanding all this, David
undertook and achieved the
adventure; which it was
impossible he should, against
such fears, and such reasonings
of his forces, from any motive
other than the assurance of
divine protection and aid. Which
fully confirms the Scripture
account of this matter, that he
did not undertake it until he
had, for the fuller satisfaction
of his associates, again
consulted, and was again assured
of success by the divine
oracle.”
Verse 5
1 Samuel 23:5. So David and his
men went to Keilah, &c. — “His
success on this occasion was
very extraordinary; he saved the
city and the inhabitants; he
delivered the country all around
from the ravages of the enemy;
he smote the Philistines with
great slaughter, and brought
away their cattle, by which
means he was enabled to subsist
himself and his forces, without
being a burden to his country.
One would have imagined that
this extraordinary success and
deliverance of so great a city
might have secured David a safe
retreat among the men of Keilah;
but it was not so; such is the
nature of man, present dangers
quickly obliterate past
obligations! Gratitude is,
without question, a most lovely
virtue, but seldom lives in the
extremes either of adversity or
success! It is like those fine
colours which storms and
sunshine equally deface.” —
Delaney.
Verse 6
1 Samuel 23:6. He came down with
an ephod — Rather, with the
ephod, namely, the high-priest’s
ephod, wherein were the Urim and
Thummim. For Abiathar, being
left, it is probable, to keep
the sanctuary, while his father
Ahimelech and the rest of the
priests went to wait upon Saul,
as soon as he heard of their
slaughter he took this principal
vestment of the high-priest, and
carried it to David. Thus God,
in the course of his providence,
gave him an opportunity, while
Doeg, the butcher, was killing
his brethren, both of escaping
himself and of bringing to David
the ephod, of which now Saul was
justly deprived.
Verse 7
1 Samuel 23:7. Saul said, God
hath delivered him into my hand
— David, who judged of other
men’s generosity by his own,
hoped he should be protected in
Keilah; and Saul, who judged in
the same manner of their
baseness, believed he should
not; and therefore he rejoiced
upon receiving the news of
David’s being shut up there,
persuaded he should now get
possession of his person. But it
was strange he should imagine
that God had taken measures to
bring an innocent and pious man
into his power, who was a
contemner of God, a breaker of
his commandments, and one that
trampled on all laws, human and
divine.
Verses 9-11
1 Samuel 23:9-11. Bring hither
the ephod — Which, doubtless,
Abiathar put on; otherwise he
could not have inquired of the
Lord by it. The Lord said, He
will come down — He purposeth to
come if thou continue here. For
still both David’s question and
God’s answer are conditional,
upon supposition. As David’s
being there was the only motive
for Saul’s coming, so, if he
departed, Saul could have no
inducement to come. And
accordingly we find he laid
aside his design so soon as he
was informed that David had
escaped. It seems probable from
this place that God’s answer by
Urim and Thummim was not by any
change in the colour or
situation of the precious stones
in the breast-plate of the
ephod, but by a voice or
suggestion from God to the
high-priest.
Verse 12
1 Samuel 23:12. The Lord said,
They will deliver thee up — God
saw the base and cowardly
disposition of the inhabitants
of Keilah, who, though they had
been so lately delivered by
David, yet would have given him
up, had he stayed among them, at
the first appearance of Saul’s
army coming against them. “And
here, methinks,” says Delaney,
“is an event that will easily
solve that hard question, about
the consistency of the divine
prescience with human free-will.
A good politician, who was let
into the course of Saul’s secret
practices with the men of
Keilah, and had fair
opportunities of sifting their
dispositions upon the point,
might fairly pronounce upon the
event; how much more, then, that
all-seeing God, who searcheth
the secrets of the heart, and
seeth the thoughts afar off —
seeth them in all their secret
workings, tendencies, and
temptations, and through all
their mazes and masks.” To
explain this a little further:
the inhabitants of Keilah acted
freely, just as their own hearts
dictated to them; they were at
liberty to behave faithfully to
David, had he stayed among them,
as well as to betray him. God
did not, therefore, pronounce
that they would deliver him up
to Saul, because he had laid
them under any absolute
necessity of so doing; but
because he saw Saul’s secret
designs, on the one hand, and
the secret workings of their
minds, and their tendency to
fear and baseness, on the other.
And, therefore, when David
inquired of him, he pronounced,
They will deliver thee up. If
any person could have known as
much of their hearts as God, he
might have pronounced the same
concerning them. It is, however,
the property of God only to see
the secrets of the heart. And as
this power in him extends to
every man that cometh into the
world, as folly as it did to the
people of Keilah, we may easily
conceive how God foreknows all
the changes of events in this
world from the beginning to the
end, though he leave the human
mind to act of itself freely;
and only by his superintending
wisdom directs all, to bring
about his gracious purposes, and
to educe good from evil.
Verse 13-14
1 Samuel 23:13-14. Which were
about six hundred — His forces
were increased two hundred since
his famous victory over the
Philistines at Keilah.
Whithersoever they could go — To
the first convenient place of
safety to which a way lay open.
In the wilderness of Ziph — A
mountainous wilderness, within
the precincts of the tribe of
Judah, and upon the confines of
Edom, Joshua 15:2. It was not
far from Maon and Carmel, 1
Samuel 23:25, 1 Samuel 25:5. God
delivered him not into his hand
— Saul confidently pronounced,
when he found David had entered
into Keilah, that God had
delivered him into his hand.
And, therefore, to show the
vanity of that ill-grounded
confidence, the sacred writer
makes use of the very same
expression reversed, and
declares God delivered him not
into his hand, though Saul
sought him every day.
Verse 16
1 Samuel 23:16. Jonathan went
and strengthened his hand in God
— He comforted and supported him
against all his fears, by
considerations on the divine
goodness and power, and by
reminding him of God’s faithful
promises made to him, and of his
singular providence, which
hitherto had been, and still
would be with him.
Verse 17
1 Samuel 23:17. Thou shalt be
king, and I shall be next unto
thee — Or, hold the second place
in the kingdom; which words
import thus much: I do not look
to be king myself, as by my
birth I might expect, but that
thou shalt be king, God having
so appointed, and I but in a
secondary place, inferior to
thee. The first part of this
sentence Jonathan might well
speak, as he had the promise of
God for it, which must stand;
but the other he spoke in human
confidence, and the event showed
how little is to be built on
that. He ought, as we ought all
to do with respect to what is
future and only in expectation,
to have spoken in the language
of St. James: “If the Lord will,
I shall be next unto thee.” And
that also my father knoweth —
For he could not but remember
what Samuel told him, (1 Samuel
15:28,) and, from David’s
wonderful successes, he probably
inferred that he was the person
of whom Samuel spake.
Verse 18
1 Samuel 23:18. They two made a
covenant before the Lord — We
have reason here to admire the
sincere friendship of Jonathan,
which remained so unshaken to
David in all events, as well in
his adversity and dangers, as in
his prosperity and successes. It
is to be observed, that, after
making this covenant, they never
came together again, that we
find, in this world.
Verses 19-22
1 Samuel 23:19-22. Then came the
Ziphites to Saul — They were of
David’s own tribe, though for
this unnatural carriage to him
he calls them strangers. Saul
said, Blessed be ye of the Lord
— Saul, notwithstanding all his
injustice and cruelty to David,
still supposes himself to be the
injured person, and his cause
the right one. Thus too often do
men let their passions blind
them so as to persuade
themselves that the most unjust
things are equitable. Go, I pray
you, prepare yet — Or rather,
Make yourselves more certain of
this, as the words may be
translated, and more agreeably
to what follows.
Verse 24-25
1 Samuel 23:24-25. But David and
his men were in the wilderness
of Maon — Having heard what the
Ziphites had undertaken, David
disappointed their design by
going into another place, with
which, it is likely, they were
not so well acquainted. For Maon
was a distant wilderness from
Ziph, though both were in the
tribe of Judah. Saul also and
his men went to seek him —
Hearing, it is likely, by the
Ziphites, whither he was gone.
Therefore he came down into a
rock — Some craggy, desolate
place, where he thought Saul
would not find him; or rather,
into a cave which was in the
rock, where, at first, he might
think to hide himself; but, on
further consideration, he
removed from thence upon Saul’s
approach.
Verse 27-28
1 Samuel 23:27-28. There came a
messenger unto Saul — See the
providence of God! His wisdom is
never at a loss for ways and
means to preserve his people.
Nothing could be more
distressful, nothing more
hopeless than the situation of
David at this time. He was
surrounded on all sides, and
there seemed no way left for
escape; but as we learn from the
fifty-fourth Psalm, composed by
him on this occasion, he
addressed himself in prayer to
his almighty Saviour, who soon
showed him that he can deliver
at all times, and in all
circumstances, however dangerous
and distressing. They called
that place [ סלע המהלקות]
Sela-hammah-lekoth — That is,
the rock of divisions. Because
God, by this interposition of
the Philistines invading the
land just at this time,
separated Saul from David, and
in a manner pulled him away,
when the latter was now almost
within his reach. |