
Text -- 1 Samuel 12:1-9 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 1Sa 12:1 - -- While they were assembled together in Gilgal. And this is another instance of Samuel's great wisdom and integrity. He would not reprove the people for...
While they were assembled together in Gilgal. And this is another instance of Samuel's great wisdom and integrity. He would not reprove the people for their sin, in desiring a king, whilst Saul was unsettled in his kingdom; lest through their accustomed levity, they should as hastily cast off their king, as they had passionately desired him, and therefore he chuseth this season for it; because Saul's kingdom was now confirmed by an eminent victory; and because the people rejoiced greatly, applauded themselves for their desires of a king; and interpreted the success which God had given them, as a divine approbation of those desires. Samuel therefore thinks fit to temper their joys, and to excite them to that repentance which he saw wanting in them, and which he knew to be necessary, to prevent the curse of God upon their new king, and the whole kingdom.

Wesley: 1Sa 12:2 - -- Ruleth over you. To him I have fully resigned my power, and own myself one of his subjects.
Ruleth over you. To him I have fully resigned my power, and own myself one of his subjects.

And therefore unable to bear the burden of government.

Wesley: 1Sa 12:2 - -- Or, among you, in the same states private persons, as you are; if they have injured any of you, the law is now open against them; any of you may accus...
Or, among you, in the same states private persons, as you are; if they have injured any of you, the law is now open against them; any of you may accuse them, your king can punish them, I do not intercede for them.

Wesley: 1Sa 12:2 - -- That is, been your guide and governor; partly, as a prophet; and partly, as a judge.
That is, been your guide and governor; partly, as a prophet; and partly, as a judge.

Wesley: 1Sa 12:3 - -- I here present myself before the Lord, and before your king, ready to give an account of all my administrations. And this protestation Samuel makes of...
I here present myself before the Lord, and before your king, ready to give an account of all my administrations. And this protestation Samuel makes of his integrity, not out of ostentation; but for his own just vindication, that the people might not hereafter for the defence of their own irregularities, reproach his government, and that being publickly acquitted from all faults in his government, he might more freely reprove the sins of the people, and, particularly, that sin of theirs in desiring a king, when they had so little reason for it.

Wesley: 1Sa 12:7 - -- Heb. the righteousnesses; that is, mercies or benefits the chief subject of the following discourse; some of their calamities being but briefly named,...
Heb. the righteousnesses; that is, mercies or benefits the chief subject of the following discourse; some of their calamities being but briefly named, and that for the illustration of God's mercy in their deliverances.

Wesley: 1Sa 12:8 - -- In this land: in which Moses and Aaron are said to settle them; because they brought them into, and seated them in part of it, that without Jordan; be...
In this land: in which Moses and Aaron are said to settle them; because they brought them into, and seated them in part of it, that without Jordan; because they were, under God, the principal authors of their entering into the land of Canaan; inasmuch as they brought them out of Egypt, conducted them through the wilderness; and thereby their prayers to God, and counsel to them, preserved them from ruin, and gave command from God for the distribution of the land among them, and encouraged them to enter into it. And lastly, Moses substituted Joshua in his stead, and commanded him to seat them there, which he did.

Wesley: 1Sa 12:9 - -- That is, they revolted from him, and carried themselves, as if they had wholly forgotten his innumerable favours. This he saith to answer an objection...
That is, they revolted from him, and carried themselves, as if they had wholly forgotten his innumerable favours. This he saith to answer an objection, that the reason why they desired a king, was, because in the time of the judges they were at great uncertainties, and often exercised with sharp afflictions: to which he answereth by concession that they were so; but adds, by way of retortion, that they themselves were the cause of it, by their forgetting God: so that it was not the fault of that kind of government, but their transgressing the rules of it.
JFB: 1Sa 12:1-4 - -- This public address was made after the solemn re-instalment of Saul, and before the convention at Gilgal separated. Samuel, having challenged a review...
This public address was made after the solemn re-instalment of Saul, and before the convention at Gilgal separated. Samuel, having challenged a review of his public life, received a unanimous testimony to the unsullied honor of his personal character, as well as the justice and integrity of his public administration.

JFB: 1Sa 12:5 - -- That, by their own acknowledgment, he had given them no cause to weary of the divine government by judges, and that, therefore, the blame of desiring ...
That, by their own acknowledgment, he had given them no cause to weary of the divine government by judges, and that, therefore, the blame of desiring a change of government rested with themselves. This was only insinuated, and they did not fully perceive his drift.|| 07468||1||10||0||@@HE REPROVES THE PEOPLE FOR INGRATITUDE.==== (1Sa 12:6-16)

JFB: 1Sa 12:5 - -- The burden of this faithful and uncompromising address was to show them, that though they had obtained the change of government they had so importunel...
The burden of this faithful and uncompromising address was to show them, that though they had obtained the change of government they had so importunely desired, their conduct was highly displeasing to their heavenly King; nevertheless, if they remained faithful to Him and to the principles of the theocracy, they might be delivered from many of the evils to which the new state of things would expose them. And in confirmation of those statements, no less than in evidence of the divine displeasure, a remarkable phenomenon, on the invocation of the prophet, and of which he gave due premonition, took place.
Clarke: 1Sa 12:1 - -- And Samuel said - It is very likely that it was at this public meeting Samuel delivered the following address; no other time seems to be given for i...
And Samuel said - It is very likely that it was at this public meeting Samuel delivered the following address; no other time seems to be given for it, and this is the most proper that could be chosen.

Clarke: 1Sa 12:2 - -- My sons are with you - It is generally agreed that these words intimate that Samuel had deprived them of their public employ, and reduced them to a ...
My sons are with you - It is generally agreed that these words intimate that Samuel had deprived them of their public employ, and reduced them to a level with the common people

Clarke: 1Sa 12:2 - -- Have walked before you from my childhood - He had been a long, steady, and immaculate servant of the public.
Have walked before you from my childhood - He had been a long, steady, and immaculate servant of the public.

Clarke: 1Sa 12:3 - -- Witness against me - Did ever a minister of state, in any part of the world, resign his office with so much self-consciousness of integrity, backed ...
Witness against me - Did ever a minister of state, in any part of the world, resign his office with so much self-consciousness of integrity, backed with the universal approbation of the public? No man was oppressed under his government, no man defrauded! He had accumulated no riches for himself; he had procured none for his friends; nor had one needy dependant been provided for out of the public purse. He might have pardoned his own sons, who had acted improperly, before he quitted the government; but though he was the most tender of parents, he would not, but abandoned them to national justice, with only a tacit solicitation of mercy: Behold, my sons are with you! They have acted improperly; I deprived them of their authority; they are amenable to you for their past conduct; I have walked uprightly and disinterestedly among you; they have not followed my steps: but can you forgive them for their father’ s sake? As a minister of justice, he abandons them to their fate; as a tender father, he indirectly and modestly pleads for them on the ground of his own services. Had he not acted thus in both these relations, he would have been unworthy of that character which he so deservedly bears.

Clarke: 1Sa 12:4 - -- They said, Thou hast not defrauded - Of what minister or governor can any nation under heaven say such things?
They said, Thou hast not defrauded - Of what minister or governor can any nation under heaven say such things?

Clarke: 1Sa 12:7 - -- Now therefore stand still - I have arraigned myself before God and you; I now arraign you before God.
Now therefore stand still - I have arraigned myself before God and you; I now arraign you before God.

Clarke: 1Sa 12:8 - -- The Lord sent Moses and Aaron - He shows them that through all their history God had ever raised them up deliverers, when their necessities required...
The Lord sent Moses and Aaron - He shows them that through all their history God had ever raised them up deliverers, when their necessities required such interference.
TSK: 1Sa 12:1 - -- Behold : 1Sa 8:5-8, 1Sa 8:19-22
have made : 1Sa 10:1, 1Sa 10:24, 1Sa 11:14, 1Sa 11:15

TSK: 1Sa 12:2 - -- walketh : 1Sa 8:20; Num 27:17
I am old : 1Sa 8:1, 1Sa 8:5; Psa 71:18; Isa 46:3, Isa 46:4; 2Ti 4:6; 2Pe 1:14
my sons : 1Sa 2:22, 1Sa 2:29, 1Sa 3:13, 1S...

TSK: 1Sa 12:3 - -- his anointed : 1Sa 12:5, 1Sa 10:1, 1Sa 24:6; 2Sa 1:14-16; Mat 22:21; Rom 13:1-7
whose ox : Num 16:15; Act 20:33; 2Co 12:14; 1Th 2:5, 1Th 2:10; 1Pe 5:2...

TSK: 1Sa 12:5 - -- The Lord : Job 31:35-40, Job 42:7
his anointed : 1Sa 26:9
ye have : Joh 18:38; Act 23:9, Act 24:16, Act 24:20; 1Co 4:4; 2Co 1:12
in my hand : Exo 22:4...

TSK: 1Sa 12:6 - -- It is the Lord : Exo 6:26; Neh 9:9-14; Psa 77:19, Psa 77:20, 78:12-72, Psa 99:6, Psa 105:26, Psa 105:41; Isa 63:7-14; Hos 12:13; Mic 6:4
advanced : or...
It is the Lord : Exo 6:26; Neh 9:9-14; Psa 77:19, Psa 77:20, 78:12-72, Psa 99:6, Psa 105:26, Psa 105:41; Isa 63:7-14; Hos 12:13; Mic 6:4
advanced : or, made

TSK: 1Sa 12:7 - -- reason : Isa 1:18, Isa 5:3, Isa 5:4; Eze 18:25-30; Mic 6:2, Mic 6:3; Act 17:3
righteous acts : Heb. righteousnesses or benefits, Jdg 5:11
to : Heb. wi...

TSK: 1Sa 12:8 - -- Jacob : Gen 46:5-7; Num 20:15; Act 7:15
cried : Exo 2:23, Exo 2:24, Exo 3:9
sent Moses : 1Sa 12:6; Exo 3:10, Exo 4:14-16, Exo 4:27-31, Exo 6:26
brough...
Jacob : Gen 46:5-7; Num 20:15; Act 7:15
cried : Exo 2:23, Exo 2:24, Exo 3:9
sent Moses : 1Sa 12:6; Exo 3:10, Exo 4:14-16, Exo 4:27-31, Exo 6:26
brought : Exo 12:51, Exo 14:30, Exo 14:31
made them : Jos 1:2-4, Jos 1:6, Jos 3:10-13; Psa 44:1-3, Psa 78:54, Psa 78:55, Psa 105:44

TSK: 1Sa 12:9 - -- forgat : Deu 32:18; Jdg 3:7; Psa 106:21; Jer 2:32
he sold : Deu 32:30; Jdg 2:14, Jdg 3:8, Jdg 4:2; Isa 50:1, Isa 50:2
of the Philistines : Jdg 10:7, J...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 1Sa 12:2 - -- My sons are with you - Possibly, however, a tinge of mortified feeling at the rejection of himself and his family, mixed with a desire to recom...
My sons are with you - Possibly, however, a tinge of mortified feeling at the rejection of himself and his family, mixed with a desire to recommend his sons to the favor and goodwill of the nation, is at the bottom of this mention of them.

Barnes: 1Sa 12:3 - -- His anointed - i. e., king Saul. The title Messiah, ΧÏιστὸς Christos , unctus, or anointed, had been given to the High Priests ...
His anointed - i. e., king Saul. The title Messiah,
Any bribe - literally, a "ransom,"the fine paid by a criminal in lieu of bonds or death Exo 21:30, applied to the bribe paid to an unjust judge to induce him to acquit the guilty. (Compare Amo 5:12.)
To blind ... - See the margin. The phrase is used of one who averts his eyes, as refusing assistance, or as showing contempt, or, as here, as winking at what is wrong.

Barnes: 1Sa 12:6 - -- Advanced - In the sense of appointing them to their office. It is, literally, "made"(see the margin; 1Ki 12:31; Heb 3:2). Samuel’ s purpos...
Advanced - In the sense of appointing them to their office. It is, literally, "made"(see the margin; 1Ki 12:31; Heb 3:2). Samuel’ s purpose is to impress the people with the conviction that Yahweh was their God, and the God of their fathers; that to Him they owed their national existence and all their national blessings, and that faithfulness to Him, to the exclusion of all other worship 1Sa 12:21 was the only safety of the newly-established monarchy. Observe the constant reference to the Exodus as the well-known turning-point of their national life (see 1Sa 4:8; 1Sa 6:6).

Barnes: 1Sa 12:9 - -- According to the present arrangement of the Book of Judges, and the common chronology, the oppression of Sisera must have occurred about 200 years a...
According to the present arrangement of the Book of Judges, and the common chronology, the oppression of Sisera must have occurred about 200 years after the entrance into Canaan. But Samuel here places it as the first great servitude, before that under Eglon king of Moab, or that from which Shamgar delivered them. And this is in accordance with the internal evidence of the Book of Judges itself. It is also the order of Jdg 10:11, except that there the Ammonites Jdg 3:13 are placed before the Philistines.
Poole: 1Sa 12:1 - -- Samuel said this to all Israel whilst they were assembled together in Gilgal. And this is another instance of Samuel’ s great wisdom and integr...
Samuel said this to all Israel whilst they were assembled together in Gilgal. And this is another instance of Samuel’ s great wisdom and integrity. He would not reprove the people for their sin, in desiring a king, whilst Saul was raw, and weak, and unsettled in his kingdom, and in the people’ s hearts, lest through their accustomed levity they should as hastily cast off their king as they had passionately desired him, and so add one sin to another; and therefore he chooseth this season for it; partly because Saul’ s kingdom was now confirmed and illustrated by an eminent victory, and so the danger of rejecting him was out of doors; which circumstance was also considerable for Samuel’ s vindication, that it might appear that his following reproof did not proceed from any selfish respects or desires, which he might be supposed to have of retaining the power in his own hands, but merely from the conscience of his duty, and a sincere desire of all their good: and partly because the people rejoiced greatly , as is said in the next foregoing verse; and upon this occasion applauded themselves for their desires of a king; and interpreted the success which God had now given them, as a Divine approbation of those desires; whereby they were like to be hardened in their impenitency, and might be drawn to many other inconveniencies. Samuel therefore thinks fit to temper their excessive joys, and to excite them to that repentance and holy fear which he saw wanting in them, and which he knew to be absolutely necessary, to prevent the curse of God upon their new king, and the whole kingdom.

Poole: 1Sa 12:2 - -- Walketh before you goeth out and cometh in before you, i.e. ruleth over you, as that phrase signifies, Num 27:17 Deu 31:2 2Ch 1:10 . To him I have fu...
Walketh before you goeth out and cometh in before you, i.e. ruleth over you, as that phrase signifies, Num 27:17 Deu 31:2 2Ch 1:10 . To him I have fully resigned all my power and authority, and do hereby renounce it, and own myself for a private person, and one of his subjects.
I am old and gray-headed and therefore unable to bear the burden of government, and feel myself greatly at ease to see it cast upon other shoulders; and therefore do not speak what I am about to say from envy of Saul’ s advancement, or from discontent at the diminution of my own power.
My sons are with you or among you, in the same stake and place, private persons, as you are; if they have injured any of you in their government, as you once complained, the law is now open against them; any of you may accuse them, your king can punish them; I do not intercede for them, I have neither power nor will to keep them from receiving the just fruits of their misdemeanours.
I have walked before you i.e. been your guide and governor, partly as a prophet, and partly as a judge.

Poole: 1Sa 12:3 - -- Witness against me I here present myself before the Lord, and before your king, being ready to give an account of all my administrations, and to make...
Witness against me I here present myself before the Lord, and before your king, being ready to give an account of all my administrations, and to make satisfaction for any injuries that I have done. And this protestation Samuel makes of his integrity, not out of ostentation or vain-glory; but partly, for his own just vindication, that the people might not hereafter, for the defence of their own irregularities, reproach his government; partly, that being publicly acquitted from all faults in his government, he might more freely and boldly reprove the sins of the people, and particularly that sin of theirs in desiring a king, when they had so little reason for it, and they had so just a governor, from whom they might have promised themselves an effectual redress of his sons’ mal-administrations, if they had acquainted him therewith; and partly, that by his example he might tacitly admonish Saul of his duty, and prevent his misunderstanding of what he had formerly said, 1Sa 8:11 &c., and mistake that for the rule of his just power, which was only a prediction of his evil practices.
Whom have I oppressed? whom have I wronged, either by fraud and false accusation, or by might and violence?
Any bribe Heb. price of redemption , given to redeem an unjust and lost cause or person from that righteous sentence which they deserved.
To blind mine eyes therewith that I should not discern what was right and just, or dissemble it, as if I did not see it. Or, that I should hide or cover mine eyes (i.e. wilfully wink at the plain truth) for it , i.e. for the bribe; or, for him , i.e. for his sake. I will restore it you , or, and I will cover mine eyes for him , i.e. I will take shame to myself, and cover my face as one ashamed to look upon him.

Poole: 1Sa 12:5 - -- The Lord is witness against you to wit, if you shall at any time hereafter reproach my government or memory. Or rather, against you , that I gave yo...
The Lord is witness against you to wit, if you shall at any time hereafter reproach my government or memory. Or rather, against you , that I gave you no cause to be weary of God’ s government of you by judges, or to desire a change of the government; and thereby the blame of it wholly rests upon yourselves. But this was only insinuated, and therefore the people did not fully understand his drift in it.
Ye have not found ought i.e. any thing which I have gotten by bribery or oppression.
They answered Heb. he answered , i.e. the whole people, who are here spoken of as one person, because they answered thus with one consent.

Poole: 1Sa 12:6 - -- That for your sakes raised, constituted, and exalted Moses and Aaron to that great power and reputation which they had, and used, to deliver you.
That for your sakes raised, constituted, and exalted Moses and Aaron to that great power and reputation which they had, and used, to deliver you.

Poole: 1Sa 12:7 - -- That I may reason with you: since God hath laid so great obligations upon you, let us a little consider whether you have answered them.
The righteou...
That I may reason with you: since God hath laid so great obligations upon you, let us a little consider whether you have answered them.
The righteous acts Heb. the righteousnesses , i.e. mercies or benefits; for so that word is oft used, as Psa 24:5 36:10 Pro 10:2 11:4 ; and that is the chief subject of the following discourse; some of their calamities being but briefly named, and that for the illustration of God’ s mercy in their deliverances.

Poole: 1Sa 12:8 - -- In this land; in which Moses and Aaron are said to settle them; partly, because they brought them into and seated them in part of it, to wit, that w...
In this land; in which Moses and Aaron are said to settle them; partly, because they brought them into and seated them in part of it, to wit, that without Jordan; partly, because they were, under God, the principal authors of their entering into the land of Canaan; inasmuch as they brought them out of Egypt, conducted them through the wilderness, and there by their prayers to God, and counsel to them, preserved them from utter ruin, and gave command and direction from God for the distribution of the land among them, and encouraged them to enter into it by promises and assurances of success; and lastly, Moses substituted Joshua in his stead, and commanded him to carry them thither, and seat them there, which also he did.

Poole: 1Sa 12:9 - -- They forgat the Lord i.e. they revolted from him, as it is explained, 1Sa 12:10 , and carried themselves as ungratefully and unworthily towards God, ...
They forgat the Lord i.e. they revolted from him, as it is explained, 1Sa 12:10 , and carried themselves as ungratefully and unworthily towards God, as if they had wholly forgotten his great and innumerable favours, and their infinite obligations to him.
Forgetting of God is oft put for all manner of wickedness, whereof indeed that is the true cause. See Isa 17:10 Jer 3:21 Eze 22:12 . This he saith, partly to answer all objection, That the reason why they desired a king was, because in the time of the judges they were at great uncertainties, and ofttimes exercised with sharp afflictions: to which he answereth by concession that they were so; but adds, by way of retortion, that they themselves were the cause of it, by their forgetting of God; so that it was not the fault of that kind of government, but their transgressing the rules of it; and partly to mind them that this their ungrateful carriage towards God was no new or strange thing, but an hereditary and inveterate disease, that so they might more easily believe their own guilt herein, and be more deeply humbled, both for their own and for their parents’ sins.
They fought against them to wit, with success, and subdued them.
Haydock: 1Sa 12:1 - -- Fathers. Septuagint, "king," ver. 25. Superiors (Worthington) are often styled fathers. Syriac, &c., "as upon your fathers," (Calmet) which is ado...
Fathers. Septuagint, "king," ver. 25. Superiors (Worthington) are often styled fathers. Syriac, &c., "as upon your fathers," (Calmet) which is adopted by the Protestants, "as it was against," &c. (Haydock)

Haydock: 1Sa 12:1 - -- You. He speaks with the authority of a prophet, (Calmet) and takes this opportunity to draw from the whole people a confession of his integrity, tha...
You. He speaks with the authority of a prophet, (Calmet) and takes this opportunity to draw from the whole people a confession of his integrity, that the kings might follow the pattern which he had set them. (Haydock)

Haydock: 1Sa 12:2 - -- Goeth, as your leader, according to your request. I am like a private man, (Calmet) willing to submit to his and the people's judgment, (Haydock) th...
Goeth, as your leader, according to your request. I am like a private man, (Calmet) willing to submit to his and the people's judgment, (Haydock) though it could not be required. (Menochius) ---
Grey-headed. This he might be at the age of sixty, which most chronologers allow him, (Haydock) as he had been at the head of affairs from his early years, in most difficult times. (Tirinus) ---
With you. As soon as I heard of your complaints, I deprived them of their power, so that you cannot blame me from their misconduct. If they were guilty, they may stand their trial before the king. (Calmet)

Haydock: 1Sa 12:3 - -- Anointed, "Christ," as the anointing of kings prefigured that of the Messias, which, in Hebrew, has the same import as the word Greek: christos h...
Anointed, "Christ," as the anointing of kings prefigured that of the Messias, which, in Hebrew, has the same import as the word Greek: christos has in Greek. (Calmet) ---
Wronged. Literally, "by calumny," or by any other mode of oppression. (Haydock) ---
Despise. Hebrew, "hide my eyes," through confusion. (Calmet) ---
Protestants, "to blind my eyes therewith." (Haydock) ---
Septuagint have read nalim, "shoes," instead of anlim. (Calmet) ---
"Have I taken from the hand of any one a preset, to render me favourable, so much as a shoe? ( upodema, or latchet) answer against me," &c. (Haydock)

Haydock: 1Sa 12:6 - -- Made, and appointed them to rule the people, Jeremias xxxvii. 15. (Le Clerc) ---
Egypt. Septuagint add, "is witness;" and some Latin copies have,...
Made, and appointed them to rule the people, Jeremias xxxvii. 15. (Le Clerc) ---
Egypt. Septuagint add, "is witness;" and some Latin copies have, "is present." (Calmet)

Haydock: 1Sa 12:7 - -- Stand up, like people cited to the bar. Having undergone his own trial with applause, Samuel shews that the people will not come off so well at the ...
Stand up, like people cited to the bar. Having undergone his own trial with applause, Samuel shews that the people will not come off so well at the tribunal of God, whom they had treated with greater disrespect, injustice, and ingratitude than they had himself, as he convinced them by an astonishing and terrible storm. (Haydock) ---
Kindness. Septuagint, "justice," as the same Hebrew word implies both. God had treated his people with mercy and with justice (Calmet) alternately. (Haydock)

Haydock: 1Sa 12:9 - -- Hasor. See Judges iv. 1. ---
Moab. Jephte delivered the people from the hands of the Ammonites, who claimed all that country, Judges xi. 15. Egl...
Hasor. See Judges iv. 1. ---
Moab. Jephte delivered the people from the hands of the Ammonites, who claimed all that country, Judges xi. 15. Eglon had been slain by Aod, before the Chanaanites enslaved Israel. (Calmet)
Gill: 1Sa 12:1 - -- And Samuel said unto all Israel,.... When assembled at Gilgal, after they had recognized Saul as their king, and he was established in the kingdom, an...
And Samuel said unto all Israel,.... When assembled at Gilgal, after they had recognized Saul as their king, and he was established in the kingdom, and while in the midst of their mirth and joy:
behold, I have hearkened unto your voice in all that ye have said unto me; respecting the affair of a king, to which it must be limited, as appears by what follows; otherwise it is possible, in some things they might apply to him about, he did not think fit to hearken to them, and grant their request, or speak for them:
and have made a king over you; that is, had by the direction and appointment of God chosen one by lot, anointed and declared him king; for it was the Lord alone, that, properly speaking, made him a king.

Gill: 1Sa 12:2 - -- And now, behold, the king walketh before you,.... He invested with his office, and in the exercise of it, and goes in and out as the captain, commande...
And now, behold, the king walketh before you,.... He invested with his office, and in the exercise of it, and goes in and out as the captain, commander, and leader of the people; it is expressive of his being in the full possession of regal power and authority, and therefore Samuel might speak the more freely, as he could not be thought to have any hope and expectation of being reinstated in his government, or to have parted with it with any regret; and he wisely took this opportunity of reproving the people for their sin of desiring a king, when Saul was settled and established in his kingdom, and when they were in the midst of all their mirth and jollity, who might, from the success that had attended this first adventure of their king, conclude that they had done a right and good thing in requesting to have one:
and I am old, and grey headed; and so unfit for government, and very willing to be eased of the burden of it: he must surely be more than fifty two years of age, as the Jews generally say he was, since it is not usual at such an age to be grey headed; see Gill on 1Sa 8:1; however, on this account he merited reverence and respect, and demanded attention:
and, behold, my sons are with you; as private persons in the condition of subjects, making no pretension to government; and if they had committed anything criminal, they were open to the law, and might be charged, and tried, and treated according to their deserts; and there they were, and might be asked what questions they thought proper with respect to what they knew of his conduct; and to be hostages or bail for him, if they could prove anything against him; or to be taken to make satisfaction for any injuries committed by him:
and I have walked before you from my childhood unto this day; his manner of and conversation from his infancy to this time was well known to them, and he had spent all his days in the service of God, and for the good of Israel.

Gill: 1Sa 12:3 - -- Behold, here I am,.... No longer the supreme governor, but a subject, and accountable for any misdemeanour charged upon me, and to which I am ready to...
Behold, here I am,.... No longer the supreme governor, but a subject, and accountable for any misdemeanour charged upon me, and to which I am ready to give answer, being now at your bar to be tried and judged before you:
witness against me before the Lord, and before his anointed; signifying, that if they had anything to lay to his charge, that they would produce it, and give proof and evidence of it in the presence of God, in whose name they met, and of Saul, anointed king, and supreme judge and ruler of the nation:
whose ox have I taken? by force to employ in his own service in ploughing his ground, or treading out his corn:
or whose ass have I taken? to ride about on in his circuit, or to carry any burden for him:
or whom have I defrauded? of their money or goods, by any artifice circumventing and cheating them:
whom have I oppressed? struck, beaten, broken, or caused to be so used wrongfully; to whose person have I been injurious any more than to their property? Some derive the word from a root which signifies favour and goodwill, and interpret it as some of the Rabbins do, of his not taking money of persons with their goodwill; or rather, that he had done nothing as a judge for favour and affection, but had acted the upright part, without regard to rich or poor, friends or foes:
or of whose hand have I received any bribe to blind mine eyes therewith? his meaning is, that he had never taken a gift or present from any person to favour his cause, that was to be brought before him, and give it for him right or wrong; to connive at any injury he had done, or to turn away his eyes from seeing where the justice of the cause lay; or that he had not received money to spare the life of a criminal that deserved to die; for the word used for a bribe signifies a ransom price, see Deu 16:19.
and I will restore it to you; the ox or ass, money or goods, gifts and presents, or bribes taken, or make compensation for any injury done to the persons or estates of men. Some render it, "I will answer you" f, or give in an answer to any such charges when exhibited.

Gill: 1Sa 12:4 - -- And they said,.... One in the name of the rest, or they all cried out as one man:
thou hast not defrauded us, nor oppressed us; had done them no wr...
And they said,.... One in the name of the rest, or they all cried out as one man:
thou hast not defrauded us, nor oppressed us; had done them no wrong, neither privately nor publicly, by fraud or by force:
neither hast thou taken ought of any man's hand; as a gift, present, or bribe, to fit your his cause. Some would infer hence that be took nothing of them for his support and maintenance, and that he lived upon his own substance; but that is not likely or reasonable; it was but just that they should support him and his family suitably to his character as a judge, whose whole life was spent in their service.

Gill: 1Sa 12:5 - -- And he said unto them, the Lord is witness against you, and his anointed is witness this day,.... Should they hereafter reproach and vilify him, and c...
And he said unto them, the Lord is witness against you, and his anointed is witness this day,.... Should they hereafter reproach and vilify him, and charge him with any acts of corruption, injustice, and violence:
that ye have not found ought in my hand; that they had nothing to accuse him of and charge him with throughout his whole administration, but had asserted his innocence and integrity, had honourably acquitted him, and given him a fair character: and they answered, he is witness; the omniscient God is a witness against us, should we depart from this testimony, and Saul, the Lord's anointed, is a witness that we have fully cleared thee from any imputations of maladministration. The word is singular, he "said" or answered g, that is, Israel said, the whole body of the people, they all replied as one man: the reason why Samuel made such a speech at this time, when he resigned his government to Saul, was not only to secure his own character, but to suggest to Saul how he should rule and govern according to his example; and that having established his own character, he could the more freely, and with the better grace, reprove the people for their sin, as in some following verses.

Gill: 1Sa 12:6 - -- And Samuel said unto the people,.... Having cleared and established his own character, he proceeds to lay before the people some of the great things G...
And Samuel said unto the people,.... Having cleared and established his own character, he proceeds to lay before the people some of the great things God had done for them formerly, and quite down to the present time, the more to aggravate their ingratitude in rejecting God as their King:
it is the Lord that advanced Moses and Aaron; raised them from a low estate, the one in a foreign country in Midian, the other in bondage in Egypt, to be deliverers, guides, and governors of his people Israel. Kimchi thinks this refers to what goes before, and that the sense is, that God, that raised Moses and Aaron to great honour and dignity, was a witness between him and the people; in which he is followed by some Christian interpreters. Ben Gersom makes mention of the same, but rather approves of the connection of the words with what follows, as does Abarbinel, and is doubtless most correct; the Targum is,"who hath done mighty things by the hands of Moses and Aaron:"
and that brought your fathers up out of the land of Egypt; when they were in bondage there, and that by the means of Moses and Aaron, by whose hands he wrought signs and wonders and inflicted plagues on the Egyptians, which made them willing at last to let Israel go.

Gill: 1Sa 12:7 - -- Now therefore stand still,.... Keep your place, and do not as yet break up the assembly, but wait a little longer patiently, and with reverence and at...
Now therefore stand still,.... Keep your place, and do not as yet break up the assembly, but wait a little longer patiently, and with reverence and attention hearken to what I have further to say:
that I may reason with you before the Lord; as in his presence; and which he observes to command the greater awe upon their mind, and the greater regard to the subject of his discourse and resolutions; which would be:
of all the righteous acts of the Lord, which he did to you and to your fathers; not only in a way of judgment delivering them into the hands of their enemies, when they sinned against him, but rather in a way of mercy and kindness in delivering them out of their hands.

Gill: 1Sa 12:8 - -- When Jacob was come into Egypt,.... With his family to see his son Joseph, and dwelt there; or rather the posterity of Jacob are meant, who settled in...
When Jacob was come into Egypt,.... With his family to see his son Joseph, and dwelt there; or rather the posterity of Jacob are meant, who settled in Egypt, and continued there many years, and at length were oppressed by the Egyptians, and brought into hard bondage:
and your fathers cried unto the Lord; by reason of their bondage, for help and deliverance:
then the Lord sent Moses and Aaron, which brought forth your fathers out of Egypt; after various messages carried by them from the Lord to Pharaoh king of Egypt, and after many signs and wonders wrought by them, by which the heart of that king was at last brought to consent to their dismission:
and made them dwell in this place; the land of Canaan; they conducted them through the Red sea, guided them through the wilderness, and accompanied them, especially Moses, to the borders of the land of Canaan; for neither of them went into it, but died before the people's entrance there. Joshua, the successor of Moses, of whom Samuel makes no mention, introduced Israel into it, conquered the land for them, and settled them in it; though Moses and Aaron, as they were the instruments of bringing them out of Egypt, were the cause, by conducting them through the wilderness, and by their prayers, counsels, and instructions, of their entrance into and settlement in it: besides, Moses appointed Joshua in his stead, and ordered him to lead the people there, and directed to the division of the land among them, yea, two tribes and an half were settled by him on the other side Jordan; the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, Syriac, and Arabic versions, read in the singular number, "he made them dwell, that is, the Lord".

Gill: 1Sa 12:9 - -- And when they forgat the Lord their God,.... The worship of the Lord their God, as the Targum; that is, they fell into idolatry, which is a plain inst...
And when they forgat the Lord their God,.... The worship of the Lord their God, as the Targum; that is, they fell into idolatry, which is a plain instance and proof of forgetfulness of God; for such that neglect his worship, and serve idols, may be truly said to forget him:
he sold them into the hand of Sisera, captain of the host of Hazor; who was general of the army of Jabin king of Canaan, who reigned in Hazor, Jdg 4:2, where they are said to be sold into the hands of Jabin, here into the hands of Sisera; because it is highly probable he was sent against them by Jabin, and subdued them, as he afterwards was sent by him, when they rebelled against him, and were delivered out of his hand:
and into the hand of the Philistines: as they were in and before the times of Samson, Jdg 13:1.
and into the hand of the king of Moab; as in the times of Ehud, Jdg 3:14, the exact order of these things is not observed:
and they fought against them; the king of Moab, Sisera, and the Philistines, and overcame them, and so they fell into their hands.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes





Geneva Bible: 1Sa 12:1 And Samuel said unto all Israel, Behold, I have ( a ) hearkened unto your voice in all that ye said unto me, and have made a king over you.
( a ) I h...

Geneva Bible: 1Sa 12:2 And now, behold, the king walketh ( b ) before you: and I am old and grayheaded; and, behold, my sons [are] with you: and I have walked before you fro...

Geneva Bible: 1Sa 12:3 Behold, here I [am]: witness against me before the LORD, and before his anointed: ( c ) whose ox have I taken? or whose ass have I taken? or whom have...

Geneva Bible: 1Sa 12:5 And he said unto them, The LORD [is] witness against you, and his ( d ) anointed [is] witness this day, that ye have not found ought in my hand. And t...

Geneva Bible: 1Sa 12:9 And when they forgat the LORD their God, he sold them into the hand of Sisera, ( e ) captain of the host of Hazor, and into the hand of the Philistine...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Sa 12:1-25
TSK Synopsis: 1Sa 12:1-25 - --1 Samuel testifies his integrity.6 He reproves the people of ingratitude.16 He terrifies them with thunder in harvest time.20 he comforts them in God'...
Maclaren -> 1Sa 12:1-15
Maclaren: 1Sa 12:1-15 - --1 Samuel 12:1-15
The portion of Samuel's address included in this passage has three main sections: his noble and dignified assertion of his official p...
MHCC -> 1Sa 12:1-5; 1Sa 12:6-15
MHCC: 1Sa 12:1-5 - --Samuel not only cleared his own character, but set an example before Saul, while he showed the people their ingratitude to God and to himself. There i...

MHCC: 1Sa 12:6-15 - --The work of ministers is to reason with people; not only to exhort and direct, but to persuade, to convince men's judgments, and so to gain their will...
Matthew Henry -> 1Sa 12:1-5; 1Sa 12:6-15
Matthew Henry: 1Sa 12:1-5 - -- Here, I. Samuel gives them a short account of the late revolution, and of the present posture of their government, by way of preface to what he had ...

Matthew Henry: 1Sa 12:6-15 - -- Samuel, having sufficiently secured his own reputation, instead of upbraiding the people upon it with their unkindness to him, sets himself to instr...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 1Sa 12:1-6; 1Sa 12:7-12
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Sa 12:1-6 - --
The time and place of the following address are not given. But itis evident from the connection with the preceding chapter implied in theexpression ...

Keil-Delitzsch: 1Sa 12:7-12 - --
"And now come hither, and I will reason with you before the Lord withregard to all the righteous acts which He has shown to you and yourfathers." ×...
Constable: 1Sa 8:1--12:25 - --B. Kingship Given to Saul chs. 8-12
"Clearly these five chapters constitute a literary unit, for they ar...

Constable: 1Sa 12:1-25 - --Samuel's second warning to the people ch. 12
The writer wrote chapters 12-15 very skillf...

Constable: 1Sa 12:1-5 - --Samuel's self-vindication 12:1-5
Why did Samuel feel the need to justify his beh...
