
Text -- 1 Samuel 21:5 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 1Sa 21:5 - -- As long as the law required, Exo 19:15. And so long David, and his men hid, it seems, hid themselves for fear of Saul, whereby they were kept both fro...
As long as the law required, Exo 19:15. And so long David, and his men hid, it seems, hid themselves for fear of Saul, whereby they were kept both from women: and from food convenient for them.

Wesley: 1Sa 21:5 - -- That is, Either, Their garments, or other utensils for their journey. Or their bodies.
That is, Either, Their garments, or other utensils for their journey. Or their bodies.

Wesley: 1Sa 21:5 - -- Heb. and this bread; is in a manner common: that is, considering the time, and our necessity, this maybe used in a manner, like common bread. For thou...
Heb. and this bread; is in a manner common: that is, considering the time, and our necessity, this maybe used in a manner, like common bread. For though for a season while it is to stand before the Lord, it be so holy, that the priest himself might not eat it; yet afterwards it is eaten by the priest, and his whole family, and so it may be by us, in our circumstances.

Wesley: 1Sa 21:5 - -- But newly put into the vessel, it must give place to the great law of necessity, and charity; because God will have mercy preferred before sacrifice.
But newly put into the vessel, it must give place to the great law of necessity, and charity; because God will have mercy preferred before sacrifice.
JFB: 1Sa 21:5 - -- As required by law (Exo 19:15). David and his attendants seem to have been lurking in some of the adjoining caves, to elude pursuit, and to have been,...
As required by law (Exo 19:15). David and his attendants seem to have been lurking in some of the adjoining caves, to elude pursuit, and to have been, consequently, reduced to great extremities of hunger.

JFB: 1Sa 21:5 - -- That is, now that it is no longer standing on the Lord's table. It is eaten by the priests, and may also, in our circumstances, be eaten by us.
That is, now that it is no longer standing on the Lord's table. It is eaten by the priests, and may also, in our circumstances, be eaten by us.

JFB: 1Sa 21:5 - -- That is, though the hallowed bread had been but newly placed on the vessel, the ritual ordinance would have to yield to the great law of necessity and...
TSK -> 1Sa 21:5
TSK: 1Sa 21:5 - -- the vessels : Act 9:15; 1Th 4:3, 1Th 4:4; 2Ti 2:20, 2Ti 2:21; 1Pe 3:17
in a manner : Lev 24:9
though it were sanctified this day in the vessel : or, e...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Sa 21:5
Barnes: 1Sa 21:5 - -- The vessels of the young men ... - i. e., their clothes Deu 22:5 or wallets (marginal reference), or other articles which might be Levitically ...
The vessels of the young men ... - i. e., their clothes Deu 22:5 or wallets (marginal reference), or other articles which might be Levitically unclean and need cleansing (Lev 13:58; Exo 19:10, etc.; Mar 7:4), as well as the person.
And the bread ... - The meaning is; "Though it is treating it like common bread to give it to me and my young men, there is fresh showbread baked and put on the table in place of what you give us;"the day being Friday. as is indicated in the verse following.
Poole -> 1Sa 21:5
Poole: 1Sa 21:5 - -- About these three days as long as the law required, Exo 19:15 . And so long David and his men had, it seems, hid themselves for fear of Saul in some ...
About these three days as long as the law required, Exo 19:15 . And so long David and his men had, it seems, hid themselves for fear of Saul in some of those caves, whereof there were many in those parts; whereby they were kept both from all converse with any other persons besides themselves, and consequently from women; and withal, from food convenient for them.
Since I came out from the place where Jonathan and David met. The vessels , i.e. either,
1. Their garments, or other utensils for their journey. Or,
2. Their bodies, for of them the question was, 1Sa 21:4 ; and having now said that women had been kept from them, he infers that therefore their bodies were holy, their members were undefiled. Thus the word vessel is used 1Th 4:4 , and in other authors, both Greek and Latin.
The bread is in a manner common Heb. and this (to wit, the bread; which is easily supplied out of the former verse, because that was the thing about which the present discourse was, and against the giving whereof the priest started an objection, 1Sa 21:4 , to which David here giveth an answer) is in a manner , or, after a sort, common , i.e. considering the time, and our necessity, this may be asked in a manner like common bread, and so is used by others. For though for a season, whilst it is to stand before the Lord, it be so holy, that the priest himself might not eat it; yet afterwards it is eaten by the priest, and by his whole family, as their common food; and so it may be by us, in our circumstances.
Though it were sanctified this day in the vessel if it were but newly put into the vessel, it must give place to the great law of necessity and charity, because God will have mercy preferred before sacrifice . Or thus, especially , when, or, the rather because this day there is other (i.e. new bread) sanctified in the vessel, i.e. put into the vessel which was made to receive this bread, Exo 25:29 , and thereby sanctified, or consecrated to God; and therefore the former shew-bread is now to be removed, and employed for the common use of the priest and his family.
Haydock -> 1Sa 21:5
Haydock: 1Sa 21:5 - -- Vessels, i.e., the bodies, have been holy; that is, have been kept from impurity: (Challoner) in which sense St. Paul uses the word, 1 Thessalonian...
Vessels, i.e., the bodies, have been holy; that is, have been kept from impurity: (Challoner) in which sense St. Paul uses the word, 1 Thessalonians iv. 4. It also includes garments, arms, &c. All was to be clean. Septuagint, "my men are all purified." (Calmet) ---
Defiled. Is liable to expose us to dangers of uncleanness, (Challoner) as we shall perhaps have to fight. (Haydock) ---
Sanctified. That is, we shall take care, notwithstanding these dangerous circumstances, to keep our vessels holy; that is, keep our bodies from every thing that may defile us. (Challoner) ---
The text is very obscure. Hebrew, "the way is impure, because to-day it shall be purified in the vessel." (Calmet) ---
Protestants, "and the bread is in a manner common, yea though it were sanctified this day in the vessel." We might eat of it in a case of such necessity. (Haydock) ---
Though laics be commonly debarred from tasting of it, we will partake of it with all due respect. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "the journey is (of a disagreeable nature, or) impure, therefore it will be rendered holy by my vessels," or arms, in the king's cause. (Haydock) ---
He seems to be going towards the infidel nations. (Menochius)
Gill -> 1Sa 21:5
Gill: 1Sa 21:5 - -- And David answered the priest, and said unto him,.... In reply to the case of the young men his servants, and of himself too, who also was intended by...
And David answered the priest, and said unto him,.... In reply to the case of the young men his servants, and of himself too, who also was intended by the priest, though out of reverence to him not mentioned:
of a truth women have been kept from us these three days since I came out; reckoning either from the time he fled from Saul at Naioth, or from the time he left Jonathan, during which time both he and his men could have no converse with women, and receive no pollution by them; and this was the time which according to the law was required for the sanctifying of persons in this way, Exo 19:15,
and the vessels of the young men are holy; their garments, as Kimchi, not being defiled with any ceremonial uncleanness, as by the touch of any unclean person: or what instruments soever they were provided with for their journey; or rather their bodies; see 2Co 4:7; and with respect to the priest's saying that the bread he had was hallowed or sacred, and so not for common use, David replies:
and the bread is in a manner common; inasmuch as it was taken off of the shewbread table, and was now common to the priest and his family, though not to others, yet in case of necessity through hunger might be allowed to strangers:
yea, though it were sanctified this day in the vessel; even though it had been set but that day on the shewbread table, and so became holy to the Lord; and yet even in such a case and circumstances as David and his men were in, it might be taken from thence and eaten of; for, as Abendana observes, nothing stands in the way of preservation of life, but idolatry, adultery, and murder; everything else may be done for the sake of that but them: or as in the margin of our Bibles, "especially when there is this day other sanctified bread"; that is, since other bread is this day put upon the shewbread table, in the room of that which has been taken away, whereby it is become holy to the, Lord; then that which is removed may be eaten, and be allowed to us in our circumstances. It seems by this that this was the sabbath day; for on that day the removal of the shewbread loaves was made, Lev 24:8; and R. Isaiah says, that it was at the going out of the sabbath that David came there; and which still makes it a more appropriate case, as produced by our Lord to justify his disciples in plucking ears of corn on the sabbath day, Mat 12:1.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Sa 21:1-15
TSK Synopsis: 1Sa 21:1-15 - --1 David at Nob obtains of Ahimelech hallowed bread.7 Doeg is present.8 David takes Goliath's sword.10 David at Gath feigns himself mad.
MHCC -> 1Sa 21:1-9
MHCC: 1Sa 21:1-9 - --David, in distress, fled to the tabernacle of God. It is great comfort in a day of trouble, that we have a God to go to, to whom we may open our cases...
Matthew Henry -> 1Sa 21:1-9
Matthew Henry: 1Sa 21:1-9 - -- Here, I. David, in distress, flies in the tabernacle of God, now pitched at Nob, supposed to be a city in the tribe of Benjamin. Since Shiloh was fo...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 1Sa 21:1-9
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Sa 21:1-9 - --
1Sa 21:1-2
David at Nob . - The town of Nob or Nobeh (unless indeed theform נבה stands for נבה here and in 1Sa 22:9, and the ה attach...
Constable: 1Sa 16:1--31:13 - --IV. SAUL AND DAVID 1 Sam. 16--31
The basic theme in Samuel, that blessing, and in particular fertility of all ki...

Constable: 1Sa 21:1--30:31 - --C. David in Exile chs. 21-30
In chapters 21-30 we see David's forces growing stronger and stronger while...

Constable: 1Sa 21:1--22:23 - --1. David's initial movements chs. 21-22
"The two chapters comprise a literary unit of three sect...
