DAVID ANOINTED BY SAMUEL.
1Sa 16:1-13.
THE rejection of Saul was laid very deeply to heart by Samuel. No
doubt there many engaging qualities in the man Saul, which Samuel
could not but remember, and which fed the flame of personal
attachment, and made the fact of his rejection hard to digest. And
no doubt, too, Samuel was concerned for the peace and prosperity of
the nation. He knew that a change of dynasty commonly meant civil
war - it might lead to the inward weakening of a kingdom already
weak enough, and its exposure to the attacks of hostile neighbours
that watched with lynx eyes for any opportunity of dashing against
Israel. Thus both on personal and on public grounds the rejection of
Saul was a great grief to Samuel, especially as the rejection of
Saul implied the rejection of Jonathan, and the prophet might ask,
with no small reason, where, in all the nation, could there be found
a better successor.
It was not God's pleasure to reveal to Samuel the tragic events that
were to stretch Jonathan and his brothers among the dead on the same
day as their father; but it was His pleasure to introduce him to the
man who, at a future time, was to rule Israel according to the ideal
which the prophet had vainly endeavoured to press upon Saul. There
is a sharpness in God's expostulation with Samuel which implies that
the prophet's grief for Saul was carried to an excessive and
therefore sinful length. "How long wilt thou mourn for Saul, seeing
I have rejected him from reigning over Israel?" Grief on account of
others seems such a sacred, such a holy feeling, that we are not
ready to apprehend the possibility of its acquiring the dark hue of
sin. Yet if God's children abandon themselves to the wildest excess
for some sorrow which bears to them the character of a fatherly
chastening; if they refuse to give effect in any way to God's
purpose in the matter, and to the gracious ends which He designs it
to serve, they are guilty of sin, and that sin one which is greatly
dishonouring to God. It can never be right to shut God out of view
in connection with our sorrows, or to forget that the day is coming
- impossible though it may seem - when His character shall be so
vindicated in all that has happened to His children, that all tears
shall be wiped from their eyes, and it shall be seen that His tender
mercies have been over all His works.
It was to Bethlehem, and to the family of Jesse, that Samuel was to
go to find the destined successor of Saul. The place was not so far
distant from Ramah as to be quite beyond the sphere of Samuel's
acquaintance. Of Jesse, one of the leading men of the place, he
would probably have at least a general knowledge, though it is plain
he had not any personal acquaintance with him, or knowledge of his
family. Bethlehem had already acquired a marked place in Hebrew
history, and Samuel could not have been ignorant of the episode of
the young Moabite widow who had given such a beautiful proof of
filial piety, and among whose descendants Jesse and his sons were
numbered. The very name of Bethlehem was fitted to recall how God
honours those that honour Him, and might have rebuked that outburst
of fear which fell from Samuel, whose first thought was that he
could not go, because if Saul heard of it he would kill him. Well,
it is plain enough that, with all his glorious qualities as a
prophet, Samuel was but a man, subject to the infirmities of men.
What an honest book the Bible is! its greatest heroes coming down so
often to the human level and showing the same weaknesses as
ourselves! But God, who stoops to human weakness, who fortified the
failing heart of Moses at the burning bush, and the doubting heart
of Gideon, and afterwards the weary heart of Elijah and the
trembling heart of Jeremiah, condescends in like manner to the
infirmity of Samuel, and provides him with an ostensible object for
his journey, which was not fitted to awaken the jealous temper of
the king. Samuel is to announce that his coming to Bethlehem is for
the purpose of a sacrifice, and the circumstances connected with the
anointing of a successor to Saul are to be gone about so quietly and
so vaguely that the great object of his visit will hardly be so much
as guessed by any.
The question has often been raised, Was this diplomatic arrangement
not objectionable? Was it not an act of duplicity and deceit?
Undoubtedly it was an act of concealment, but it does not follow
that it was an act of duplicity. It was concealment of a thing which
Samuel was under no obligation to divulge. It was not concealment of
which the object was to mislead anyone, or to induce any one to do
what he would not have done had the whole truth been known to him.
When concealment is practiced in order to take an unfair advantage
of any one, or to secure an unworthy advantage over him, it is a de-
testable crime. But to conceal what you are under no obligation to
reveal, when some important end is to be gained, is a quite
different thing. "It is the glory of God to conceal a thing;"
providence is often just a vast web of concealment; the trials of
Job were the fruit of Divine concealment; the answers of our Lord to
the Syrophoenician woman were a concealment; the delay in going to
Bethany when He heard of the illness of Lazarus was just a
concealment of the glorious miracle which He intended by-and-bye to
perform. One may tell the truth, and yet not the whole truth,
without being guilty of any injustice or dishonesty. It was not on
Saul's account at ail that Samuel was sent to anoint a king at
Bethlehem. It was partly on Samuel's account and partly on David's.
If David was here-after to fill the exalted office of king of
Israel, it was desirable that he should be trained for its duties
from his earliest years. Saul had not been called to the throne till
middle life, till his character had been formed and his habits
settled; the next king must be called at an earlier period of life.
And though the boy's father and brothers may not understand the full
nature of the distinction before him, they must be made to
understand that he is called to a very special service of God, in
order that they may give him up freely and readily to such
preparation as that service demands. This seems to have been the
chief reason of the mission of Samuel to Bethlehem. It could not but
be known after that, that David was to be distinguished as a servant
of God, but no idea seems to have been conveyed either to his
brothers or to the elders of Bethlehem that he was going to be king.
The arrangements for the public worship of God in those times -
while the ark of God was still at Kirjath-jearim - seem to have been
far from regular, and it appears to have been not unusual for Samuel
to visit particular places for the purpose of offering a sacrifice.
It would seem that the ordinary, though not the uniform, occasion
for such visits was the occurrence of something blameworthy in the
community, and if so this will explain the terror of the elders of
Bethlehem at the visit of Samuel, and their frightened question, "Comest
thou peaceably?" Happily Samuel was able to set their fears at rest,
and to assure them that the object of his visit was entirely
peaceable. It was a religious service he was come to perform, such a
service as may have been associated with the other religious
services he was accustomed to hold as he went round in circuit in
the neighbourhood of Ramah. For this sacrifice the elders of
Bethlehem were called to sanctify themselves, as were also Jesse and
his sons. They were to take the usual steps for freeing themselves
of all ceremonial uncleanness, and after the sacrifice they were to
share the feast. A considerable interval would necessarily elapse
between the sacrifice and the feast, for the available portions of
the animal had to be prepared for food, and roasted on the fire. It
was during this interval that Samuel made acquaintance with the sons
of Jesse. First came the handsome and stately Eliab. And strange it
is that even with the fate of the handsome and stately Saul full in
his memory, Samuel leapt to the conclusion that this was the Lord's
anointed. Could he wonder at God's emphatic No I Surely he had seen
enough of outward appearance coupled with inward unfitness. One
trial of that criterion had been enough for Israel.
But alas, it is not merely in the choice of kings that men are apt
to show their readiness to rest in the outward appearance. To what
an infinite extent has this tendency been carried in the worship of
God! Let everything be outwardly correct, the church beautiful, the
music excellent, the sermon able, the congregation numerous and
respectable - what a pattern such a church is often regarded! Alas!
how little satisfactory it may be to God. The eye that searches and
knows us penetrates to the heart, - it is there only that God finds
the genuine elements of worship. The lowly sense of personal
unworthiness, the wondering contemplation of the Divine love, the
eager longing for mercy to pardon and grace to help, the faith that
grasps the promises, the hope that is anchored within the veil, the
kindness that breathes benediction all round, the love that beareth
all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all
things, - it is these things, breathing forth from the hearts of a
congregation, that give pleasure to God.
Or look at what often happens in secular life. See how intensely
eager some are about appearances. Why, it is one of the stereotyped
rules of society that it is necessary "to keep up appearances."
Well-born people may have become poor, very poor, but they must live
to outward appearance as if they were rich. Between rivals there may
be a deadly jealousy, but they must, by courtesy, keep up the form
of friendship. And in trade a substantial appearance must be given
to goods that are really worthless. And often, men who are really
mean and unprincipled must pose as persons very particular about the
right and very indignant at the wrong. And some, meaner than the
common, must put on the cloak of religion, and establish a character
for sanctity.
The world is full of idolatries, but I question if any idolatry has
been more extensively practiced than the idolatry of the outward
appearance. If there be less of this in our day than perhaps a
generation back, it is because in these days of sifting and trial
men have learned in so many ways by hard experience what a delusion
it is to lean on such a broken reed. Yes, and we have had men among
us who from a point of view not directly Christian have exposed the
shams and counterfeits of the age, - men like Carlyle, who have
sounded against them a trumpet blast which has been echoed and
re-echoed round the very globe. But surely we do not need to go
outside the Bible for this great lesson. "Thou desirest truth in the
inward parts, and in the hidden part Thou shalt make me to know
wisdom;" "If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear
me." Or if we pass to the New Testament, what is the great lesson of
the parable of the Publican and the Pharisee? The Publican was a
genuine man, an honest, humble, self-emptied sinner. The Pharisee
was a silly puffed-up pretender. The world seems to think that all
high profession must be hollow. I need not say that such an opinion
is utterly untenable. The world would have you profess nothing, lest
you should not come up to it. Christ says, "Abide in Me, so shall ye
bear much fruit." It was on this principle that St. Paul professed
so much and did so much. ''The life that I live in the flesh, I live
by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for
me."
There is nothing to be said of the other sons of Jesse. Only the
youngest one remained, apparently too young to be at the feast; he
was in the field, keeping the sheep. "And Jesse sent and brought him
in. Now he was ruddy, and withal of a beautiful countenance" (marg.
eyes), ''and goodly to look to. And the Lord said, Arise, anoint
him, for this is he." Though goodly to look at he was too young, too
boyish to be preferred on the score of "outward appearance." It was
qualities unseen, and as yet but little developed, that commended
him. Greatly astonished must Jesse and his other sons have been to
see Samuel pouring on the ruddy stripling the holy oil, and
anointing him for whatever the office might be. But it has often
been God's way to find His agents in unexpected places. Here a great
king is found in the sheepfold. In Joseph's time a prime minister of
Egypt was found in the prison. Our Lord found His chief apostle in
the school of Gamaliel. The great Reformer of the sixteenth century
was found in a poor miner's cottage. God is never at a loss for
agents, and if the men fail that might naturally have been looked
for to do Him service substitutes for them are not far to seek. Out
of the very stones He can raise up children to Abraham.
But it was not a mere arbitrary arrangement that David should have
been a shepherd before he was king. There were many things in the
one employment that prepared the way for the other. In the East the
shepherd had higher rank and a larger sphere of duties than is
common with us. The duties of the shepherd, to watch over his flock,
to feed and protect them, to heal the sick, bind up the broken, and
bring again that which was driven away, corresponded to those which
the faithful and godly ruler owed to the people committed to his
sceptre. It was from the time of David that the shepherd phraseology
began to be applied to rulers and their people; and we hardly carry
away the full lesson that the prophets intended to teach in their
denunciations of "the shepherds that fed themselves and not the
flock" when we apply these exclusively to the shepherds of souls. So
appropriate was the emblem of the shepherd for denoting the right
spirit and character of rulers, that it was ultimately appropriated
in a very high and peculiar sense to the person and office of the
Lord Jesus Christ. But long ere he appeared King David had
familiarized men's minds with the kind of benefits that flow from
the sceptre of a shepherd-ruler - the kind of blessings that were to
flow in their fullness from Christ. Never did he write a more
expressive word than this, "The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not
want." On the groundwork of his own earthly kingdom he had drawn the
pattern of things in heavenly places, for describing which in after
times no language could be found more suitable than that borrowed
from his first occupation.
But in full harmony with the character of Old Testament typology,
the glory of the thing symbolized was infinitely greater than the
glory of the symbol. Much though the nation owed to the godly
administration of him whom God ''took from the sheepfold, and
brought from following the ewes great with young, to feed Jacob His
people and Israel His inheritance," these benefits were shadows
indeed when compared with the blessings procured by the great
"Shepherd of Israel," "the good Shepherd that giveth His life for
the sheep," whose shepherd care does not terminate with the life
that now is, but will be exercised in eternity in feeding them and
leading them by living fountains of water, where God shall wipe away
all tears from their eyes.
There are other points of typical resemblance between David and
Christ that demand our notice here. If it was a strange-like thing
for God to find the model king of Israel in a sheepcot at Bethlehem,
it was still more so to find the Saviour of the world in a workshop
at Nazareth. But again; King David was chosen for qualities that did
not fall in with the ordinary conception of what was king-like, but
qualities that commended him to God; and in the same manner the Lord
Jesus Christ, God's Elect, in whom His soul delighted, was not
marked by those attributes which men might have considered suitable
in one who was to gain the empire of the world. "He shall grow up as
a tender plant, and as a root out of a dry ground; He hath no form
nor comeliness, and when we shall see Him there is no beauty that we
should desire Him." In bodily form the Lord Jesus would seem to have
resembled David rather than Saul. There is no reason to think that
there was any great physical superiority in Christ, that He was
taller than the common, or that He was distinguished by any of those
physical features that at first sight captivate men. And even in the
region of intellectual and spiritual influence, our Lord did not
conform to the type that naturally commands the confidence and
admiration of the world. He had a still, quiet manner. His eloquence
did not flash, nor blaze, nor flow like a torrent. The power of His
words was due more to their wonderful depth of meaning, going
straight to the heart of things, and to the aptness of His homely
illustrations. Our Lord's mode of conquest was very remarkable. He
conquered by gentleness, by forbearance, by love, by sympathy, by
self-denial. He impressed men with the glory of sacrifice, the glory
of service, the glory of obedience, obedience to the one great
authority - the will of God - to which all obedience is due. He
inspired them with a love of purity, - purity of heart, purity after
the highest pattern. If you compare our blessed Lord with those who
have achieved great conquests, you cannot but see the difference. I
do not mean with conquerors like Alexander, or Caesar, or Napoleon.
Napoleon himself at St. Helena showed in a word the vast difference
between Christ and them. ''Our conquests," said he, "have been
achieved by force, but Jesus achieved His by love, and to-day
millions would die for Him." But look at some who have conquered by
gentler means. Take such men as Socrates, or Plato, or Aristotle.
They achieved great intellectual conquests - they founded
intellectual empires. But the intellect of Jesus Christ was of
another order from theirs. He propounded no theory of the universe.
He did not affect to explain the world of reason. He did not profess
to lay bare the laws of the human mind, or prescribe conditions for
the welfare of states. What strikes us about Christ's method of
influence is its quiet homeliness. Yet quiet and homely though it
was and is, how prodigious, how unprecedented has been its power!
What other king of men has wielded a tithe of His influence? And
that not with one class of society, but with all, not only with the
poor and uneducated, but with thinkers and men of genius as well;
not only with men and women who know the world, and know their own
hearts and all their wants, and apprehend the fitness of Christ to
supply them, but even with little children, in the simple
unconsciousness of opening years. For out of the mouths of babes and
sucklings He hath perfected praise.
Now let us mark this also, in conclusion, that besides being a King
Himself Jesus makes all His people kings to God. Every Christian is
designed to be a ruler, an unconscious one it may be, but one who
exercises an influence in the same direction as Christ's. How can
you accomplish this? By first of all drinking into Christ's spirit,
looking out on the world as He did, with compassion, sympathy,
self-sacrifice, and an ardent desire for its renovation and its
happiness. By walking "worthy of the vocation wherewith you are
called." Not by the earthquake, or by the tempest, but by the still
small voice. By quiet, steady, persistent love, goodness, and
self-denial. These are the true Christian weapons, often little
thought of, but really the armour of God, and weapons mighty to the
pulling down of strongholds and the subjugation of the world to
Christ.
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