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Teks -- 1 Samuel 18:11-30 (NET)

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18:11 and Saul threw the spear , thinking , “I’ll nail David to the wall !” But David escaped from him on two different occasions . 18:12 So Saul feared David , because the Lord was with him but had departed from Saul . 18:13 Saul removed David from his presence and made him a commanding officer . David led the army out to battle and back. 18:14 Now David achieved success in all he did , for the Lord was with him. 18:15 When Saul saw how very successful he was, he was afraid of him. 18:16 But all Israel and Judah loved David , for he was the one leading them out to battle and back . 18:17 Then Saul said to David , “Here’s my oldest daughter , Merab . I want to give her to you in marriage. Only be a brave warrior for me and fight the battles of the Lord .” For Saul thought , “There’s no need for me to raise my hand against him. Let it be the hand of the Philistines !” 18:18 David said to Saul , “Who am I ? Who are my relatives or the clan of my father in Israel that I should become the king’s son-in-law ?” 18:19 When the time came for Merab , Saul’s daughter , to be given to David , she instead was given in marriage to Adriel , who was from Meholah . 18:20 Now Michal , Saul’s daughter , loved David . When they told Saul about this, it pleased him. 18:21 Saul said , “I will give her to him so that she may become a snare to him and the hand of the Philistines may be against him.” So Saul said to David , “Today is the second time for you to become my son-in-law .” 18:22 Then Saul instructed his servants , “Tell David secretly , ‘The king is pleased with you, and all his servants like you. So now become the king’s son-in-law .” 18:23 So Saul’s servants spoke these words privately to David . David replied , “Is becoming the king’s son-in-law something insignificant to you? I’m just a poor and lightly-esteemed man !” 18:24 When Saul’s servants reported what David had said , 18:25 Saul replied , “Here is what you should say to David : ‘There is nothing that the king wants as a price for the bride except a hundred Philistine foreskins , so that he can be avenged of his enemies .’” (Now Saul was thinking that he could kill David by the hand of the Philistines .) 18:26 So his servants told David these things and David agreed to become the king’s son-in-law . Now the specified time had not yet expired 18:27 when David , along with his men , went out and struck down two hundred Philistine men . David brought their foreskins and presented all of them to the king so he could become the king’s son-in-law . Saul then gave him his daughter Michal in marriage . 18:28 When Saul realized that the Lord was with David and that his daughter Michal loved David, 18:29 Saul became even more afraid of him . Saul continued to be at odds with David from then on . 18:30 Then the leaders of the Philistines would march out , and as often as they did so, David achieved more success than all of Saul’s servants . His name was held in high esteem .

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Expository Notes on the Bible (Constable)

  • After Shechem the Canaanite raped Dinah, Simeon and Levi gained revenge by deceiving the Shechemites into being circumcised as the condition for Dinah's marriage. Then they murdered the incapacitated men of the city."The stor...
  • Statements in the Book of Samuel imply that someone who had witnessed at least some of the events recorded wrote it. However the original writer must have written most of it after Samuel's death (i.e., -1 Sam. 25-2 Sam. 24) a...
  • The Book of Samuel covers the period of Israel's history bracketed by Samuel's conception and the end of David's reign. David turned the kingdom over to Solomon in 971 B.C.3David reigned for 40 and one-half years (2 Sam. 2:11...
  • I. Eli and Samuel chs. 1-3A. The change from barrenness to fertility 1:1-2:101. Hannah's condition 1:1-82. Hannah's vow 1:9-183. Hannah's obedience 1:19-284. Hannah's song 2:1-10B. The contrast between Samuel and Eli's sons 2...
  • "In addition to being the middle chapter of 1 Samuel, chapter 16 is pivotal in another way as well: Its first half (vv. 1-13), ending with a statement concerning David's reception of the Spirit of God, describes David's anoin...
  • Earlier the writer narrated Saul's anointing, military success, and the popular reaction to him (chs. 10-11). Now he followed the same pattern by recording David's anointing, military success, and the popular reaction to him ...
  • We have already seen that Jonathan was a man of faith and courage (14:1-15). Jonathan found a soul brother in David, a man who committed himself to trusting and obeying God as he did. This common purpose on the deepest level ...
  • The evil spirit from the Lord (cf. 16:4, whatever it was) afflicted Saul the very next day. David and Saul each had something in their hand. David held a harp with which he sought to help the king by playing soothing music. S...
  • Since he had been unsuccessful in murdering David himself, Saul also tried to get other people to kill him (cf. 2 Sam. 11:15). Saul had promised his daughter in marriage to Goliath's victor (17:25). Nevertheless now Saul adde...
  • Saul now abandoned pretense (18:22) and ordered Jonathan and his servants to put David to death (cf. v. 11). He "went public"with his attacks against David feeling driven, like Pharaoh, to more desperate measures. This create...
  • This section records Saul's fourth attempt to kill David. The writer set his account of these attempts in chiastic form.ASaul directly tried to kill David. 18:10-16BSaul indirectly tried using the Philistines. 18:17-20B'Saul ...
  • Saul concluded at first that David had not come to the new moon sacrificial meal because he was unclean (cf. Lev. 7:20-21; 15:16). His continued absence required an explanation, which Saul looked to David's friend to provide....
  • Ahimelech the Hittite may have been a foreign mercenary (cf. Uriah the Hittite, 2 Sam. 11:3). The writer may have mentioned him to show the extent of David's appeal. Abishai was David's nephew, one of the sons of his sister Z...
  • Ackroyd, Peter R. The First Book of Samuel. Cambridge Bible Commentary on the New English Bible series. Cambridge, Eng.: University Press, 1971._____. "The Verb Love--'Aheb in the David-Jonathan Narratives--A Footnote."Vetus ...
  • Chapters 9-20 contrast with chapters 2-8 in that this later section is negative whereas the earlier one was positive. It records failure; the former records success. Compare the similar narrative of Saul's triumphs (1 Sam. 7-...
  • A tabernacle, evidently the Mosaic tabernacle, and the Mosaic tabernacle's bronze altar still stood at Gibeon (lit. little hill; 1 Chron. 16:39-40; 21:28-29; 2 Chron. 1:3, 5-6). Gibeon was one of the so-called high places whe...
  • This pericope furnishes the plot for the drama that unfolds in the rest of the chapter.12:1 John saw a "sign,"something that signified or represented something else (cf. v. 3; 13:13-14; 15:1; 16:14; 19:29). Usually John used ...

Expositions Of Holy Scripture (Maclaren)

  • 1 Samuel 18:5-161 Samuel 18:5 anticipates 1 Samuel 18:13-16. It is the last verse of a section which interrupts the even flow of the story, and which is absent from the Septuagint. Verse 6 follows immediately on 1 Samuel 17:5...
  • 1 Samuel 18:10-11, which record it, are not in the Septuagint, and the narrative does run more smoothly without them. But if they are retained, they show how the moody suspicion with which Saul eyed David' came to a swift, mu...
  • The growing awe of him is marked in 1 Samuel 18:12, 15, and the word in the latter verse is stronger than that in the former. It is a pathetic picture of the gradual creeping over a strong man of a nameless terror. Ever-thick...
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