
Text -- 1 Samuel 15:3 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 1Sa 15:3 - -- Both persons and goods, kill all that live, and consume all things without life, for I will have no name nor remnant of that people left, whom long si...
Both persons and goods, kill all that live, and consume all things without life, for I will have no name nor remnant of that people left, whom long since I have devoted to utter destruction.

Wesley: 1Sa 15:3 - -- Shew no compassion or favour to any of them. The same thing repeated to prevent mistake, and oblige Saul to the exact performance hereof.
Shew no compassion or favour to any of them. The same thing repeated to prevent mistake, and oblige Saul to the exact performance hereof.

Wesley: 1Sa 15:3 - -- Which was not unjust, because God is the supreme Lord of life, and can require his own when he pleaseth; infants likewise are born in sin, and therefo...
Which was not unjust, because God is the supreme Lord of life, and can require his own when he pleaseth; infants likewise are born in sin, and therefore liable to God's wrath. Their death also was rather a mercy than a curse, as being the occasion of preventing their sin and punishment.

Wesley: 1Sa 15:3 - -- Which being all made for man's benefit, it is not strange if they suffer with him, for the instruction of mankind.
Which being all made for man's benefit, it is not strange if they suffer with him, for the instruction of mankind.
JFB -> 1Sa 15:2-3; 1Sa 15:2-3
JFB: 1Sa 15:2-3 - -- The powerful tribe which inhabited the country immediately to the eastward of the northern Cushites. Their territory extended over the whole of the ea...
The powerful tribe which inhabited the country immediately to the eastward of the northern Cushites. Their territory extended over the whole of the eastern portion of the desert of Sinai to Rephidim--the earliest opponent (Deu 25:18; Exo 17:8-16) --the hereditary and restless enemy of Israel (Num 14:45; Jdg 3:13; Jdg 6:3), and who had not repented (1Sa 14:48) of their bitter and sleepless hatred during the five hundred years that had elapsed since their doom was pronounced. Being a people of nomadic habits, they were as plundering and dangerous as the Bedouin Arabs, particularly to the southern tribes. The national interest required, and God, as KING OF ISRAEL, decreed that this public enemy should be removed. Their destruction was to be without reservation or exception.

JFB: 1Sa 15:2-3 - -- I am reminded of what Amalek did--perhaps by the still remaining trophy or memorial erected by Moses (Exo 17:15-16).
I am reminded of what Amalek did--perhaps by the still remaining trophy or memorial erected by Moses (Exo 17:15-16).
Clarke -> 1Sa 15:3
Clarke: 1Sa 15:3 - -- Slay both man and woman - Nothing could justify such an exterminating decree but the absolute authority of God. This was given: all the reasons of i...
Slay both man and woman - Nothing could justify such an exterminating decree but the absolute authority of God. This was given: all the reasons of it we do not know; but this we know well, The Judge of all the earth doth right. This war was not for plunder, for God commanded that all the property as well as all the people should be destroyed.
Defender -> 1Sa 15:3
Defender: 1Sa 15:3 - -- It is generally assumed that the Amalekites were descendants of Esau's grandson (Gen 36:12). There is a reference, however, to "the country of the Ama...
It is generally assumed that the Amalekites were descendants of Esau's grandson (Gen 36:12). There is a reference, however, to "the country of the Amalekites" in the earlier times of Abraham (Gen 14:7). It may be that there was an earlier Amalek, a descendant of Canaan, after whom Esau's grandson was named. In any case, the Amalekites were cruel and inveterate enemies of Israel. They had tried to destroy Israel as soon as God's people escaped from Egypt, and God therefore had ordained their future destruction (Exo 17:8-16; Deu 25:17-19)."
TSK -> 1Sa 15:3
TSK: 1Sa 15:3 - -- Now go : The Amalekites, a people of Arabia Petrea, who inhabited a tract of country on the frontiers of Egypt and Canaan, had acted with great cruelt...
Now go : The Amalekites, a people of Arabia Petrea, who inhabited a tract of country on the frontiers of Egypt and Canaan, had acted with great cruelty towards the Israelites on their coming out of Egypt, and God then purposed that Amalek, as a nation, should be blotted out from under heaven; but it had been spared till it had filled up the measure of its iniquities, and now this purpose is carried into effect by Saul, upwards of 400 years afterwards! Nothing could justify such an exterminating decree but the absolute authority of God; and this was givencaps1 . acaps0 ll the reasons of it we do not know; but this we know well, the Judge of all the earth doeth right.
utterly destroy : Lev 27:28, Lev 27:29; Num 24:20; Deu 13:15, Deu 13:16, Deu 20:16-18; Jos 6:17-21
slay : Exo 20:5; Num 31:17; Isa 14:21, Isa 14:22
ox and sheep : Gen 3:17, Gen 3:18; Rom 8:20-22

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Sa 15:3
Barnes: 1Sa 15:3 - -- Utterly destroy - Rather, "devote to destruction"(Lev 27:28 note). When a city or people were thus made cherem, everything living was to be des...
Poole -> 1Sa 15:3
Poole: 1Sa 15:3 - -- All that they have both persons and goods; kill all that live, and consume all things without life; for I will have no name nor remnant of that peopl...
All that they have both persons and goods; kill all that live, and consume all things without life; for I will have no name nor remnant of that people, whom long since I have cursed and devoted to utter destruction.
Spare them not show no compassion or favour to any of them. The same thing repeated to prevent mistake, and oblige Saul to the exact performance hereof; or, to leave him without excuse, in case of neglect.
Infant and suckling for their parents’ crime and punishment; which was not unjust, because God is the supreme Lord and giver of life, and can require his own when he pleaseth; infants also are born in sin, Psa 51:5 , and therefore liable to God’ s wrath, Eph 2:3 , and to death, Rom 5:12,14 . Their death also was rather a mercy than a curse to them, as being the occasion of preventing the vast increase of their sin and punishment.
Ox and sheep, camel and ass which being all made for man’ s benefit, it is not strange nor unjust if they suffer with him, and for him and for the instruction of mankind.
Haydock -> 1Sa 15:3
Haydock: 1Sa 15:3 - -- Destroy, as a thing accursed. (Haydock) ---
Child. The great master of life and death (who cuts off one half of mankind whilst they are children)...
Destroy, as a thing accursed. (Haydock) ---
Child. The great master of life and death (who cuts off one half of mankind whilst they are children) has been pleased sometimes to ordain that children should be put to the sword, in detestation of the crimes of their parents, and that they might not live to follow the same wicked ways. But without such ordinance of God, it is not allowable in any wars, how just soever, to kill children. (Challoner) ---
The Israelites were now to execute God's orders with blind obedience, as he cannot be guilty of injustice. ---
Nor covet....his, is omitted in Hebrew, &c. (Calmet) ---
Amalec is stricken when the flesh is chastised---He is destroyed when we repress evil thoughts. (St. Gregory) (Worthington)
Gill -> 1Sa 15:3
Gill: 1Sa 15:3 - -- Now go and smite Amalek,.... This was one of the three things the Israelites were obliged to do when they came into the land of Canaan, as Kimchi obse...
Now go and smite Amalek,.... This was one of the three things the Israelites were obliged to do when they came into the land of Canaan, as Kimchi observes; one was, to appoint a king over them, another, to build the house of the sanctuary, and the third, to blot out the name and memory of Amalek, see Deu 25:19 and this work was reserved for Saul, their first king:
and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them not; all were to be devoted to destruction, and nothing remain to be made use of in any way, to any profit and advantage; living creatures were to be put to death, and everything else burnt and destroyed:
but slay both men and women, infant and suckling; neither sex nor age were to be regarded, no mercy and pity shown to any; they had shown none to Israel when weak and feeble, and by the law of retaliation none was to be exercised on them:
ox and sheep, camel and ass; though useful creatures, yet not to be spared; as not men, women, and children, through commiseration, so neither these through covetousness, and neither of them on any pretence whatsoever. Children suffered for their parents, and cattle because of their owners, and both were a punishment to their proprietors; an ox, or any other creature, might not be spared, lest it should be said, as Kimchi observes, this was the spoil of Amalek, and so the name and memory of Amalek would not be blotted out.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Sa 15:1-35
TSK Synopsis: 1Sa 15:1-35 - --1 Samuel sends Saul to destroy Amalek.6 Saul favours the Kenites.7 He spares Agag and the best of the spoil.10 Samuel denounces unto Saul God's reject...
MHCC -> 1Sa 15:1-9
MHCC: 1Sa 15:1-9 - --The sentence of condemnation against the Amalekites had gone forth long before, Exo 17:14; Deu 25:19, but they had been spared till they filled up the...
Matthew Henry -> 1Sa 15:1-9
Matthew Henry: 1Sa 15:1-9 - -- Here, I. Samuel, in God's name, solemnly requires Saul to be obedient to the command of God, and plainly intimates that he was now about to put him ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 1Sa 15:1-3
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Sa 15:1-3 - --
The account of the war against the Amalekites is a verycondensed one, and is restricted to a description of the conduct of Saul onthat occasion. Wit...
Constable -> 1Sa 13:1--15:35; 1Sa 15:1-35
Constable: 1Sa 13:1--15:35 - --C. Kingship Removed from Saul chs. 13-15
This section documents Saul's disobedience to the revealed will...
