Verse 1
1 Samuel 25:1. And Samuel died —
According to the best
chronologers, he governed Israel
after the death of Eli sixteen
years or upward, and lived about
forty years after in the reign
of Saul; and all the Israelites
lamented him — It is no wonder
that so wise and holy a man, so
righteous a ruler, so just a
judge, and so enlightened a
prophet, should be uncommonly
and universally lamented;
especially when the wisdom and
equity of his government,
compared with Saul’s tyranny and
extravagance, made his memory
more dear and his loss more
regretted. “Those have hard
hearts,” says Henry, “that can
bury their faithful ministers
with dry eyes, and are not
sensible of the loss of them who
have prayed for them, and taught
them the way of the Lord.” And
buried him in his house in Ramah
— Where, it is likely, there was
a burying-place for his family
in some part of his garden, or
some field adjacent. For they
had then no public places of
interment. He was now attended
by all Israel to his grave, and
his remains, many centuries
after, were removed with
incredible pomp, and almost one
continued train of attendants,
from Ramah to Constantinople, by
the Emperor Arcadius, A.D. 401.
Verse 2
1 Samuel 25:2. Whose possessions
were in Carmel — In some part of
this wilderness Israel wandered,
when they came out of Egypt. The
place would bring to David’s
mind God’s care over them, which
he might now improve for his own
encouragement.
Verse 3
1 Samuel 25:3. The name of his
wife was Abigail — That is, the
joy of his father; yet he could
not promise himself much joy of
her, when he married her to such
a husband; it seems, by
inquiring (no unfrequent thing)
more after his wealth than after
his wisdom. He was of the house
of Caleb — This is added to
aggravate his crime, that he was
a degenerate branch of that
noble stock of Caleb, and
consequently of the tribe of
Judah, as David was.
Verses 4-6
1 Samuel 25:4-6. Nabal did shear
his sheep — Which times were
celebrated with feasting. That
liveth in prosperity — In the
Hebrew it is, To him that liveth,
but the word life in Scripture
often signifies happiness, as
death signifies misery. By
speaking thus, David both
congratulates Nabal’s felicity,
and tacitly intimates to him the
distress in which he and his men
were.
Verse 7-8
1 Samuel 25:7-8. We hurt them
not, &c. — This, considering the
licentiousness of soldiers, and
the necessities David and his
men were exposed to, was no
small favour, which Nabal was
bound both in justice and
gratitude, and prudence, to
requite. We come in a good day —
That is, in a day of feasting
and rejoicing; when men are most
cheerful and liberal; when thou
mayest relieve us out of thy
abundance without damage to
thyself; when thou art receiving
the mercies of God, and
therefore obliged to pity and
relieve distressed and indigent
persons. Give, I pray thee,
whatsoever cometh to thy hand —
Most obliging words, and full of
respect, mixed with strong
arguments; and they did not
desire delicacies, but any thing
that was at hand which he could
spare.
Verse 10
1 Samuel 25:10. Who is David? —
There be many servants, &c. — He
reproaches them all as a company
of fugitives and vagabonds; and,
in effect, taxes David with
infidelity to his master Saul; a
most rude and brutish answer to
such a civil message and humble
request.
Verses 14-17
1 Samuel 25:14-17. But one of
the young men told Abigail, &c.
— One of those belonging to
Nabal. Who can help admiring the
wisdom and fidelity of this
shepherd, who admonished his
mistress of the danger her
family was in; as he rationally
concluded from the rude abuse
that had been put upon David,
whose merits he honestly set
forth before her. They were a
wall unto us — This servant says
more than David’s men had said
of themselves; that they not
only did them no harm, but were
a guard to them against robbers
and against wild beasts. A man
cannot speak to him — But he
flies into a passion. Nabal must
have been a most brutish,
churlish man, to extort such a
character of himself from his
own servants.
Verse 18-19
1 Samuel 25:18-19. Then Abigail
took two hundred loaves, &c. —
This shows he was a great man,
who had plenty of provisions in
his house. Abigail did this of
her own accord, without her
husband’s leave, because it was
a case of apparent necessity,
for the preservation of herself
and husband, and all the family,
from imminent ruin. She said
unto her servants, Go on before
me, &c. — They carried the
present, that David, beholding
it, might be a little mitigated
before she came to him.
Verse 21
1 Samuel 25:21. Surely in vain
have I kept all that this fellow
hath — Though David justly
thought he had no right to take
any part of the flock of Nabal
by way of plunder; yet, when he
and his men had taken the
trouble of defending them for
some time from all damage,
which, probably, they otherwise
could not have escaped, he
concluded, with much reason,
that he and his men, when
reduced to necessity, had cause
to expect something by way of
gratuity from Nabal, for the
services they had done him.
Verse 22
1 Samuel 25:22. So and more also
do God unto the enemies of David
— That is, unto David himself.
But because it might seem
ominous to curse himself,
therefore, instead of David, he
mentions David’s enemies: see 1
Samuel 20:16. The meaning seems
to be, that he wishes God might
bless his enemies, and pour evil
upon himself, if he did not
destroy Nabal and all the males
of his family before the
morning. But is this the voice
of David? Can he speak so
unadvisedly with his lips? Has
he been so long in the school of
affliction, and learned no more
patience therein? Lord, what is
man? And what need have we to
pray, Lead us not into
temptation! David’s wrath,
though perhaps justly moved,
here carried him to a pitch
that, if executed, would have
filled him with remorse, sorrow,
and shame, as it could by no
means have been reconciled to
the laws of that God who was his
defender, and whom alone he
confided in for support under,
and deliverance out of, his
troubles. In which laws, too, he
was well instructed, and
therefore ought to have been
governed by them, and not by his
furious resentment.
Verse 24
1 Samuel 25:24. Upon me, my
lord, let this iniquity be, &c.
— Impute Nabal’s sin to me; and,
if thou pleasest, punish it in
me, who here offer myself as a
sacrifice to thy just
indignation. This whole speech
of Abigail shows great wisdom.
By an absolute submitting to
mercy, without any pretence of
justification of what was done,
(but rather with aggravation of
it,) she endeavours to work upon
David’s generosity, to pardon
it. And there is hardly any head
of argument, whence the greatest
orator might argue in this case,
which she doth not manage to the
best advantage.
Verse 25
1 Samuel 25:25. Let not my lord
regard this man of Belial, &c. —
She represents him as a man that
offended out of folly, rather
than malice; which might in some
degree excuse his rudeness. For
as his name is, so is he — Nabal
in the Hebrew signifies a fool,
though not one by nature, but
rather through pride and
insolence.
Verse 26
1 Samuel 25:26. Seeing the Lord
hath withholden thee from coming
to shed blood — Nothing could
possibly be spoken to David with
more effect, to turn away his
wrath, than thus to insinuate
such an opinion of his goodness
and clemency, as already to
conclude she had diverted him
from his purpose; or, rather,
that God had interposed by his
good providence to hinder him
from shedding blood. Now let
thine enemies be as Nabal — Let
them be as contemptible as Nabal
is, and will be for this odious
action; let them be as unable to
do thee any hurt as he is; let
them be forced to yield to thee,
and implore thy pardon, as Nabal
now doth by my mouth; let the
vengeance thou didst design upon
Nabal and his family fall upon
their heads, who, by their
inveterate malice against thee,
do more deserve it than this
fool for this miscarriage; and
much more than all the rest of
our family, who, as they are
none of thine enemies, so they
were no way guilty of this
wicked action. And therefore
spare these, and execute thy
vengeance upon more proper
objects.
Verse 27
1 Samuel 25:27. Now this
blessing — That is, this present
or gift. The same phrase is
used, 1 Samuel 30:26; 2 Kings
5:15. A present is termed a
blessing, not only because the
matter of it comes from God’s
blessing, but also because it is
given with a blessing, or with a
good will. Let it be given unto
the young men — As being
unworthy of David’s own
acceptance. Thus humbly she
speaks of the noble present she
had brought.
Verse 28
1 Samuel 25:28. Forgive the
trespass of thy handmaid — That
is, the trespass which I have
taken upon myself, and which, if
it be punished, the punishment
will reach to me. Sure house —
Will give the kingdom to thee,
and to thy house for ever, as he
hath promised thee. And
therefore let God’s kindness to
thee make thee gentle and
merciful to others; do not sully
thy approaching glory with the
stain of innocent blood; but
consider that it is the glory of
a king to pass by offences: and
that it will be thy loss to cut
off such as will shortly be thy
subjects.
My lord fighteth the battles,
&c. — For the Lord, and for the
people of the Lord, against
their enemies; especially the
Philistines. And, as this is thy
proper work, and therein thou
mayest expect God’s blessing; so
it is not thy work to draw thy
sword in thy own private quarrel
against any of the people of the
Lord; and God will not bless
thee in it. Evil hath not been
found in thee, &c. — Though thou
hast been charged with many
crimes, by Saul and others, yet
thy innocence is evident to all
men. Do not therefore, by this
cruel act, justify thine
enemies’ reproaches, or blemish
thy great and just reputation.
Verse 29
1 Samuel 25:29. A man hath risen
to pursue thee — Saul, though no
way injured. To seek thy soul —
To take away thy life. Bundle of
life — Or, in the bundle: that
is, in the society, or
congregation of the living; out
of which men are taken, and cut
off by death. The phrase is
taken from the common usage of
men, who bind those things in
bundles which they are afraid to
lose. The meaning is, God will
preserve thy life; and therefore
it becomes not thee,
unnecessarily, to take away the
lives of any; especially of the
people of thy God. With the Lord
— That is, in the custody of
God, who, by his watchful
providence, preserves this
bundle, and all that are in it;
and thee in a particular manner,
as being thy God in a particular
way, and special covenant. The
Jews understand this, not only
of the present life, but of that
which is to come, even the
happiness of separate souls; and
therefore use it commonly as an
inscription on their
grave-stones. “Here we have laid
the body, trusting the soul is
bound up in the bundle of life
with the Lord.” Them shall he
sling out — God himself will cut
them off suddenly, violently,
and irresistibly; and cast them
far away; both from his presence
and from thy neighbourhood, and
from all capacity of doing thee
hurt.
Verse 31
1 Samuel 25:31. This shall be no
grief unto thee — Thy mind and
conscience will be free from all
the torment which such an action
would cause in thee. By which,
she insinuates what a blemish
this would be to his glory, what
a disturbance to his peace, if
he proceeded to execute his
purpose; and withal implies, how
comfortable it would be to him
to remember that he had, for
conscience toward God,
restrained his passions. Shed
blood causeless — Which, she
signifies, would be done if he
should go on. For though Nabal
had been guilty of abominable
rudeness and ingratitude, yet he
had done nothing worthy of death
by the laws of God or of man.
And whatsoever he had done, the
rest of his family were
innocent. Or that my lord hath
avenged himself — Which is
directly contrary to God’s law,
Leviticus 19:18; Deuteronomy
32:35. Then — When God shall
make thee king, let me find
grace in thy sight.
Verse 32-33
1 Samuel 25:32-33. Blessed be
the Lord, &c. — Who, by his
gracious providence, so disposed
matters that thou shouldst come
to me. He rightly begins at the
fountain of this deliverance;
and then proceeds to the
instruments. Who hast kept me
from coming, &c. — Which I had
sworn to do. Hereby it plainly
appears, that oaths, whereby men
bind themselves to any sin, are
null and void; and, as it was a
sin to make them, so it is
adding sin to sin to perform
them.
Verse 35-36
1 Samuel 25:35-36. I have
accepted thy person — That is,
showed my acceptance of thy
person by my grant of thy
request. Behold, he held a feast
— As the manner was upon those
solemn occasions. Sordid
covetousness and vain
prodigality were met together in
him. Told nothing — As he was
then incapable of admonition,
his reason and conscience being
both asleep.
Verse 37-38
1 Samuel 25:37-38. His heart
died — He fainted away through
the fear and horror of so great
a mischief, though it was past.
As one, who, having in the night
galloped over a narrow plank,
laid upon a broken bridge over a
deep river, when in the morning
he came to review it, was struck
dead with the horror of the
danger he had been in. The Lord
smote Nabal — God either
inflicted some other stroke upon
him, or increased his grief and
fear to such a height as killed
him.
Verse 39
1 Samuel 25:39. Blessed, &c. —
This was another instance of
human infirmity in David. David
sent — But this doubtless was
not done immediately after
Nabal’s death, but some time
after it; though such
circumstances be commonly
omitted in the sacred history,
which gives only the heads and
most important passages of
things. |