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Text -- 1 Samuel 15:1-14 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 1Sa 15:1 - -- Thou hast committed error already, now regain God's favour by thy exact obedience to what he commands.
Thou hast committed error already, now regain God's favour by thy exact obedience to what he commands.
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Wesley: 1Sa 15:2 - -- Now I will revenge those old injuries of the Amalekites on their children: who continue in their parents practices.
Now I will revenge those old injuries of the Amalekites on their children: who continue in their parents practices.
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Wesley: 1Sa 15:2 - -- When he was newly come out of cruel and long bondage, and was now weak, and weary, and faint, and hungry, Deu 25:18, and therefore it was barbarous in...
When he was newly come out of cruel and long bondage, and was now weak, and weary, and faint, and hungry, Deu 25:18, and therefore it was barbarous instead of that pity which even Nature prompted them to afford, to add affliction to the afflicted; it was also horrid impiety to fight against God himself and to lift up their hand in a manner against the Lord's throne, whilst they struck at that people which God had brought forth in so stupendous a way.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Wesley: 1Sa 15:6 - -- A people descending from, or nearly related to Jethro, who anciently dwelt in rocks near the Amalekites, Num 24:21, and afterwards some of them dwelt ...
A people descending from, or nearly related to Jethro, who anciently dwelt in rocks near the Amalekites, Num 24:21, and afterwards some of them dwelt in Judah, Jdg 1:16, whence it is probable they removed, (which, dwelling in tents, they could easily do) and retired to their old habitation, because of the wars and troubles wherewith Judah was annoyed.
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Wesley: 1Sa 15:6 - -- Some of your progenitors did so, and for their sakes all of you shall fare the better. You were not guilty of that sin for which Amalek is now to be d...
Some of your progenitors did so, and for their sakes all of you shall fare the better. You were not guilty of that sin for which Amalek is now to be destroyed. When destroying judgments are abroad God takes care to separate the precious from the vile. It is then especially dangerous to be found in the company of God's enemies. The Jews have a saying, Wo to a wicked man, and to his neighbour.
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Wesley: 1Sa 15:7 - -- That is, from one end of their country to the other; he smote all that he met with: but a great number of them fled away upon the noise of his coming,...
That is, from one end of their country to the other; he smote all that he met with: but a great number of them fled away upon the noise of his coming, and secured themselves in other places, 'till the storm was over.
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Wesley: 1Sa 15:8 - -- Whom he found. Now they paid dear for the sin of their ancestors. They were themselves guilty of idolatry and numberless sins, for which they deserved...
Whom he found. Now they paid dear for the sin of their ancestors. They were themselves guilty of idolatry and numberless sins, for which they deserved to be cut off. Yet when God would reckon with them, he fixes upon this as the ground of his quarrel.
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Wesley: 1Sa 15:9 - -- Thus they obeyed God only so far as they could without inconvenience to themselves.
Thus they obeyed God only so far as they could without inconvenience to themselves.
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Wesley: 1Sa 15:11 - -- Repentance implies grief of heart, and change of counsels, and therefore cannot be in God: but it is ascribed to God when God alters his method of dea...
Repentance implies grief of heart, and change of counsels, and therefore cannot be in God: but it is ascribed to God when God alters his method of dealing, and treats a person as if be did indeed repent of the kindness he had shewed him.
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To implore his pardoning mercy for Saul, and for the people.
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Wesley: 1Sa 15:11 - -- Therefore he did once follow God. Otherwise it would have been impossible, he should turn back from following him.
Therefore he did once follow God. Otherwise it would have been impossible, he should turn back from following him.
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That is, a monument or trophy of his victory.
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Wesley: 1Sa 15:13 - -- That is, the people. Thus, he lays the blame upon the people; whereas they could not do it without his consent; and he should have used his power to o...
That is, the people. Thus, he lays the blame upon the people; whereas they could not do it without his consent; and he should have used his power to over - rule them.
JFB -> 1Sa 15:1; 1Sa 15:2-3; 1Sa 15:2-3; 1Sa 15:4; 1Sa 15:4; 1Sa 15:5; 1Sa 15:5; 1Sa 15:6; 1Sa 15:7-9; 1Sa 15:8-9; 1Sa 15:10-11; 1Sa 15:12; 1Sa 15:12
JFB: 1Sa 15:1 - -- Several years had been passed in successful military operations against troublesome neighbors. During these Saul had been left to act in a great measu...
Several years had been passed in successful military operations against troublesome neighbors. During these Saul had been left to act in a great measure at his own discretion as an independent prince. Now a second test is proposed of his possessing the character of a theocratic monarch in Israel; and in announcing the duty required of him, Samuel brought before him his official station as the Lord's vicegerent, and the peculiar obligation under which he was laid to act in that capacity. He had formerly done wrong, for which a severe rebuke and threatening were administered to him (1Sa 13:13-14). Now an opportunity was afforded him of retrieving that error by an exact obedience to the divine command.
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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.
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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).
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JFB: 1Sa 15:4 - -- The alacrity with which he entered on the necessary preparations for the expedition gave a fair, but delusive promise of faithfulness in its execution...
The alacrity with which he entered on the necessary preparations for the expedition gave a fair, but delusive promise of faithfulness in its execution.
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JFB: 1Sa 15:4 - -- Or Telem, among the uttermost cities of the tribe of Judah towards the coast of Edom (Jos 15:21, Jos 15:24).
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JFB: 1Sa 15:6 - -- (See on Jdg 1:16). In consequence, probably, of the unsettled state of Judah, they seem to have returned to their old desert tracts. Though now interm...
(See on Jdg 1:16). In consequence, probably, of the unsettled state of Judah, they seem to have returned to their old desert tracts. Though now intermingled with the Amalekites, they were not implicated in the offenses of that wicked race; but for the sake of their ancestors, between whom and those of Israel there had been a league of amity, a timely warning was afforded them to remove from the scene of danger.
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JFB: 1Sa 15:7-9 - -- His own view of the proper and expedient course to follow was his rule, not the command of God.
His own view of the proper and expedient course to follow was his rule, not the command of God.
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JFB: 1Sa 15:8-9 - -- This was the common title of the Amalekite kings. He had no scruple about the apparent cruelty of it, for he made fierce and indiscriminate havoc of t...
This was the common title of the Amalekite kings. He had no scruple about the apparent cruelty of it, for he made fierce and indiscriminate havoc of the people. But he spared Agag, probably to enjoy the glory of displaying so distinguished a captive, and, in like manner, the most valuable portions of the booty, as the cattle. By this wilful and partial obedience to a positive command [1Sa 15:3], complying with it in some parts and violating it in others, as suited his own taste and humor, Saul showed his selfish, arbitrary temper, and his love of despotic power, and his utter unfitness to perform the duties of a delegated king in Israel.
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JFB: 1Sa 15:10-11 - -- Repentance is attributed in Scripture to Him when bad men give Him cause to alter His course and method of procedure, and to treat them as if He did "...
Repentance is attributed in Scripture to Him when bad men give Him cause to alter His course and method of procedure, and to treat them as if He did "repent" of kindness shown. To the heart of a man like Samuel, who was above all envious considerations, and really attached to the king, so painful an announcement moved all his pity and led him to pass a sleepless night of earnest intercession.
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JFB: 1Sa 15:12 - -- That is, a pillar (2Sa 18:18); literally, a hand, indicating that whatever was the form of the monument, it was surmounted, according to the ancient f...
That is, a pillar (2Sa 18:18); literally, a hand, indicating that whatever was the form of the monument, it was surmounted, according to the ancient fashion, by the figure of a hand, the symbol of power and energy. The erection of this vainglorious trophy was an additional act of disobedience. His pride had overborne his sense of duty in first raising this monument to his own honor, and then going to Gilgal to offer sacrifice to God.|| 07574||1||11||0||@Saul said unto him, Blessed be thou of the Lord: I have performed the commandment of the Lord==--Saul was either blinded by a partial and delusive self-love, or he was, in his declaration to Samuel, acting the part of a bold and artful hypocrite. He professed to have fulfilled the divine command, and that the blame of any defects in the execution lay with the people. Samuel saw the real state of the case, and in discharge of the commission he had received before setting out, proceeded to denounce his conduct as characterized by pride, rebellion, and obstinate disobedience. When Saul persisted in declaring that he had obeyed, alleging that the animals, whose bleating was heard, had been reserved for a liberal sacrifice of thanksgiving to God, his shuffling, prevaricating answer called forth a stern rebuke from the prophet. It well deserved it--for the destination of the spoil to the altar was a flimsy pretext--a gross deception, an attempt to conceal the selfishness of the original motive under the cloak of religious zeal and gratitude.
Clarke: 1Sa 15:1 - -- The Lord sent me to anoint thee - This gave him a right to say what immediately follows.
The Lord sent me to anoint thee - This gave him a right to say what immediately follows.
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Clarke: 1Sa 15:2 - -- I remember that which Amalek did - The Amalekites were a people of Arabia Petraea, who had occupied a tract of country on the frontiers of Egypt and...
I remember that which Amalek did - The Amalekites were a people of Arabia Petraea, who had occupied a tract of country on the frontiers of Egypt and Palestine. They had acted with great cruelty towards the Israelites on their coming out of Egypt. (See Exo 17:8 (note), and the notes there). They came upon them when they were faint and weary, and smote the hindermost of the people - those who were too weak to keep up with the rest. (See Deu 25:18). And God then purposed that Amalek, as a nation, should be blotted out from under heaven; which purpose was now fulfilled by Saul upwards of four hundred years afterwards!
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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.
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Clarke: 1Sa 15:4 - -- Two hundred thousand - and ten thousand - The Septuagint, in the London Polyglot, have Four Hundred thousand companies of Israel, and Thirty thousan...
Two hundred thousand - and ten thousand - The Septuagint, in the London Polyglot, have Four Hundred thousand companies of Israel, and Thirty thousand companies of Judah. The Codex Alexandrinus has Ten thousand of each. The Complutensian Polyglot has Two Hundred thousand companies of Israel, and Ten thousand of Judah. And Josephus has Four Hundred thousand of Israel, and Thirty thousand of Judah. All the other versions are the same with the Hebrew text; and there is no difference in the MSS.
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Clarke: 1Sa 15:5 - -- Saul came to a city of Amalek - I believe the original should be translated, and Saul came to the city Amalek; their capital being called by the nam...
Saul came to a city of Amalek - I believe the original should be translated, and Saul came to the city Amalek; their capital being called by the name of their tribe.
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Clarke: 1Sa 15:6 - -- Said unto the Kenites - The Kenites were an ancient people. Jethro, the father-in-law of Moses, was a Kenite. Hobab his son (if the same person be n...
Said unto the Kenites - The Kenites were an ancient people. Jethro, the father-in-law of Moses, was a Kenite. Hobab his son (if the same person be not meant) was guide to the Hebrews through the wilderness. They had a portion of the promised land, near to the city Arad. See Jdg 1:16; and for more particulars concerning them and the Amalekites, see the notes on Num 26:20-21 (note).
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Clarke: 1Sa 15:7 - -- From Havilah - to Shur - From Pelusium in Egypt, unto the Red Sea. - Josephus. But Havilah lay eastward from the Red Sea; the Amalekites lay between...
From Havilah - to Shur - From Pelusium in Egypt, unto the Red Sea. - Josephus. But Havilah lay eastward from the Red Sea; the Amalekites lay between this and the way to Egypt towards Shur.
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Clarke: 1Sa 15:11 - -- It repenteth me that I have set up Saul - That is, I placed him on the throne; I intended, if he had been obedient, to have established his kingdom....
It repenteth me that I have set up Saul - That is, I placed him on the throne; I intended, if he had been obedient, to have established his kingdom. He has been disobedient; I change my purpose, and the kingdom shall not be established in his family. This is what is meant by God’ s repenting - changing a purpose according to conditions already laid down or mentally determined.
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Clarke: 1Sa 15:12 - -- He set him up a place - Literally, a hand, יד yad . Some say it was a monument; others, a triumphal arch: probably it was no more than a hand, p...
He set him up a place - Literally, a hand,
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)."
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Defender: 1Sa 15:8 - -- This statement evidently applies only to the people of the particular Amalekite cities attacked by Saul. David later destroyed many of the Amalekites ...
This statement evidently applies only to the people of the particular Amalekite cities attacked by Saul. David later destroyed many of the Amalekites (1Sa 27:8, 1Sa 27:9; 1Sa 30:1, 1Sa 30:17), and Saul himself was eventually slain by an Amalekite (2Sa 1:5-13)."
TSK: 1Sa 15:1 - -- am 2925, bc 1079, An, Ex, Is, 412
The Lord : 1Sa 15:17, 1Sa 15:18, 1Sa 9:16, 1Sa 10:1
hearken : 1Sa 15:16, 1Sa 12:14, 1Sa 13:13; 2Sa 23:2, 2Sa 23:3; 1...
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TSK: 1Sa 15:2 - -- I remember : Jer 31:34; Hos 7:2; Amo 8:7
Amalek : Exo 17:8-16; Num 24:20; Deu 25:17-19
I remember : Jer 31:34; Hos 7:2; Amo 8:7
Amalek : Exo 17:8-16; Num 24:20; Deu 25:17-19
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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
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TSK: 1Sa 15:6 - -- the Kenites : 1Sa 27:10; Num 24:21, Num 24:22; Jdg 1:16, Jdg 4:11, Jdg 5:24; 1Ch 2:55
depart : Gen 18:25, Gen 19:12-16; Num 16:26, Num 16:27, Num 16:3...
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TSK: 1Sa 15:7 - -- smote : 1Sa 14:48; Job 21:30; Ecc 8:13
Havilah : This Havilah was probably situated in Arabia, and the district of Chaulon may mark the spot. It seem...
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TSK: 1Sa 15:8 - -- Agag : 1Sa 15:3; Num 24:7; 1Ki 20:30, 1Ki 20:34-42; Est 3:1
utterly : 1Sa 27:8, 1Sa 30:1; Jos 10:39, Jos 11:12
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TSK: 1Sa 15:9 - -- the best : 1Sa 15:3, 1Sa 15:15, 1Sa 15:19; Jos 7:21
the fatlings : or, the second sort, 2Sa 6:13
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TSK: 1Sa 15:11 - -- repenteth me : 1Sa 15:35; Gen 6:6; 2Sa 24:16; Psa 110:4; Jer 18:7-10; Amo 7:3; Jon 3:10, Jon 4:2
turned : Jos 22:16; 1Ki 9:6; Psa 36:3, Psa 78:41, Psa...
repenteth me : 1Sa 15:35; Gen 6:6; 2Sa 24:16; Psa 110:4; Jer 18:7-10; Amo 7:3; Jon 3:10, Jon 4:2
turned : Jos 22:16; 1Ki 9:6; Psa 36:3, Psa 78:41, Psa 78:57, Psa 125:5; Zep 1:6; Mat 24:13; Heb 10:38
hath not performed : 1Sa 15:3, 1Sa 15:9, 1Sa 13:13
it grieved : 1Sa 15:35, 1Sa 16:1; Psa 119:136; Jer 9:1, Jer 9:18, Jer 13:17; Luk 19:41-44; Rom 9:1-3
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TSK: 1Sa 15:12 - -- Carmel : 1Sa 25:2; Jos 15:55; 1Ki 18:42
he set him : 1Sa 7:12; Jos 4:8, Jos 4:9; 2Sa 18:18
a place : Yad , Literally as the LXX render χειρα ...
Carmel : 1Sa 25:2; Jos 15:55; 1Ki 18:42
he set him : 1Sa 7:12; Jos 4:8, Jos 4:9; 2Sa 18:18
a place :
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TSK: 1Sa 15:13 - -- Blessed : 1Sa 13:10; Gen 14:19; Jdg 17:2; Rth 3:10
I have performed : 1Sa 15:9, 1Sa 15:11; Gen 3:12; Pro 27:2, Pro 28:13, Pro 30:13, Pro 31:31; Luk 17...
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TSK: 1Sa 15:14 - -- What meaneth : Psa 36:2, Psa 50:16-21; Jer 2:18, Jer 2:19, Jer 2:22, Jer 2:23, Jer 2:34-37; Mal 3:13-15; Luk 19:22; Rom 3:19; 1Co 4:5
What meaneth : Psa 36:2, Psa 50:16-21; Jer 2:18, Jer 2:19, Jer 2:22, Jer 2:23, Jer 2:34-37; Mal 3:13-15; Luk 19:22; Rom 3:19; 1Co 4:5
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
The absence of all chronology or note of time is remarkable.
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Barnes: 1Sa 15:2 - -- Compare the marginal references. It appears 1Sa 14:48 that this expedition against Amalek was not made without fresh provocation. Probably some incu...
Compare the marginal references. It appears 1Sa 14:48 that this expedition against Amalek was not made without fresh provocation. Probably some incursion similar to that described in 1 Sam. 30 was made by them upon the south country at a time when they thought the Israelites were weakened by their contests with the Philistines.
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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...
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Barnes: 1Sa 15:4 - -- Telaim - Probably the same as "Telem"Jos 15:24, one of the uttermost cities of Judah, toward the coast of Edom. The name means "lambs,"and was ...
Telaim - Probably the same as "Telem"Jos 15:24, one of the uttermost cities of Judah, toward the coast of Edom. The name means "lambs,"and was probably so called from the numerous flocks.
Two hundred thousand ... - A wonderful contrast with the six hundred men who composed his whole army before 1Sa 13:15, and a proof how completely for a time the Philistines had been driven back. The separate mention of the men of Judah shows how little union there was between Juduh and Ephraim even at this time; a circumstance which throws light upon the whole after history.
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Barnes: 1Sa 15:7 - -- The district here described would stretch from Havilah on the extreme east to Shur, either near Suez, or further north on the coast road from Gaza t...
The district here described would stretch from Havilah on the extreme east to Shur, either near Suez, or further north on the coast road from Gaza to Egypt.
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The saving Agag alive was in direct violation of the devotion to destruction.
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Barnes: 1Sa 15:9 - -- The fatlings - The present Hebrew text cannot be so rendered. It can only mean "the second best"(compare the margin), i. e., sheep of the age t...
The fatlings - The present Hebrew text cannot be so rendered. It can only mean "the second best"(compare the margin), i. e., sheep of the age to cut or shed the two teeth, sheep in their prime. But it is probable that the reading is corrupt, and that "fat or dainty bits"is the true reading.
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Barnes: 1Sa 15:11 - -- It grieved Samuel - " Samuel was angry, or displeased,"as Jonah was Jon 4:1, and for a similar reason. Samuel was displeased that the king whom ...
It grieved Samuel - " Samuel was angry, or displeased,"as Jonah was Jon 4:1, and for a similar reason. Samuel was displeased that the king whom he had anointed should be set aside. It seemed a slur on his prophetic office.
He cried unto the Lord - With the wild scream or shriek of supplication. (See 1Sa 7:8-9; 1Sa 12:18.) The phrase and the action mark Samuel’ s fervent, earnest character.
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Barnes: 1Sa 15:12 - -- A place - Rather, "a monument."The Hebrew word יד yâd means a "hand,"but is used in the sense of "monument,"or "trophy,"in 2Sa 18:18...
A place - Rather, "a monument."The Hebrew word
Carmel - (see the marginal reference) would be on Saul’ s line of march on his return from the country of the Amalekites, more especially if he came from the neighborhood of Akaba.
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Barnes: 1Sa 15:13 - -- Gilgal being within 15 miles of Ramah, Samuel might easily have come from Ramah that morning. Self-will and rashness had hitherto been Saul’ s ...
Gilgal being within 15 miles of Ramah, Samuel might easily have come from Ramah that morning. Self-will and rashness had hitherto been Saul’ s chief faults. He now seems to add falsehood and hypocrisy.
Poole: 1Sa 15:2 - -- I seem to have forgotten, but now I will show that I remember, and now will revenge, those old injuries done four hundred years ago, which now I wil...
I seem to have forgotten, but now I will show that I remember, and now will revenge, those old injuries done four hundred years ago, which now I will punish in their children; which was the more just, because they continued in their parents’ cruel practices, below, 1Sa 15:33 . In the way when he came up from Egypt ; when he was newly come out of cruel and long bondage, and was now weak, and weary, and faint, and hungry, Deu 25:18 ; and therefore it was barbarous and inhuman, instead of that pity which even nature prompted them to afford, to add affliction to the afflicted; it was also horrid impiety to fight against God himself, and to lift up their hand in a manner against the Lord’ s throne , as some translate these words, Exo 17:16 , whilst they struck at that people which God had brought forth in so stupendous and miraculous a way.
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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.
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Poole: 1Sa 15:4 - -- Who are particularly noted here, as also Zec 11:8 , either as select persons of extraordinary strength and courage; or to commend that tribe, which,...
Who are particularly noted here, as also Zec 11:8 , either as select persons of extraordinary strength and courage; or to commend that tribe, which, though the kingdom had been promised to their own tribe, yet were forward in serving and obeying a king of another, and that a far meaner tribe.
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Poole: 1Sa 15:5 - -- A city of Amalek their chief city, where their king was, as is probable from 1Sa 15:8 .
Laid wait intending to draw them forth of their city by som...
A city of Amalek their chief city, where their king was, as is probable from 1Sa 15:8 .
Laid wait intending to draw them forth of their city by some pretence, like that of Joshua, Jos 7 , and then to intercept them, and so surprise their city: which haply they did, though it be not here recorded, it being not worth while to mention all the minute circumstances of such matters.
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Poole: 1Sa 15:6 - -- The Kenites a people descending from or nearly related unto Jethro, who anciently dwelt in rocks near the Amalekites, Num 24:21 , and afterwards some...
The Kenites a people descending from or nearly related unto Jethro, who anciently dwelt in rocks near the Amalekites, Num 24:21 , and afterwards some of them dwelt in Judah, Jud 1:16 , whence it is probable they removed, (which, dwelling in tents, they could easily do,) and retired to their old habitation, because of the wars and troubles wherewith Judah was annoyed.
Ye showed kindness some of your progenitors did so, Exo 18:12 Num 10:31 , and for their sakes all of you shall fare the better. You were not guilty of that sin for which Amalek is now to be destroyed.
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Poole: 1Sa 15:7 - -- i.e. From one end of their country to the other; he smote all that he met with; but a great number of them fled away upon the noise of his coming, a...
i.e. From one end of their country to the other; he smote all that he met with; but a great number of them fled away upon the noise of his coming, as is usual in such cases, and secured themselves in other places, until the storm was over, when they returned again; of whom we read before, 1Sa 13:6 14:22 .
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Poole: 1Sa 15:8 - -- Saul spared
Agag either out of foolish pity for the goodliness of his person, which Josephus notes; or for his respect to his royal majesty, in th...
Saul spared
Agag either out of foolish pity for the goodliness of his person, which Josephus notes; or for his respect to his royal majesty, in the preservation of which he thought himself concerned; or for the glory of his triumph: compare 1Sa 15:12 .
All the people to wit, the body of the people, but not every individual person, as hath been showed. Universal particles are commonly thus understood, as is confessed.
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Poole: 1Sa 15:9 - -- Saul and the people the one proposed to do so, and the other consented to it, and so both were guilty.
All that was good which it is more than prob...
Saul and the people the one proposed to do so, and the other consented to it, and so both were guilty.
All that was good which it is more than probable they reserved for their own use, rather than for sacrifice, because they knew God would not accept a sacrifice contrary to his own command. Thus they obey God only so far as they could without inconvenience to themselves; they destroyed only what was not worth keeping, nor fit for their use.
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Poole: 1Sa 15:11 - -- It repenteth me: repentance properly notes grief of heart, and change of counsels, and therefore cannot be in God, who is unchangeable, most wise, an...
It repenteth me: repentance properly notes grief of heart, and change of counsels, and therefore cannot be in God, who is unchangeable, most wise, and most blessed; but it is ascribed to God in such cases, when men give God cause to repent, and when God alters his course and method of dealing, and treats a person as if he did indeed repent of all the kindness he had showed to him.
He cried unto the Lord all night to implore his pardoning mercy for Saul, and for the people; so far was he from rejoicing in their calamities, as an envious and self-seeking person would have done.
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Poole: 1Sa 15:12 - -- Carmel not Mount Carmel, of which Jos 12:22 , but another mountain or town in the tribe of Judah, of which see Jos 15:55 . A place, i.e. a monument o...
Carmel not Mount Carmel, of which Jos 12:22 , but another mountain or town in the tribe of Judah, of which see Jos 15:55 . A place, i.e. a monument or trophy of his victory, as the same Hebrew word is used, 2Sa 18:18 . And this may be here noted by way of censure, that he set it not to God’ s honour, but to himself, i.e. to his own praise; which he minded in the first place, and afterwards went to Gilgal, as it here follows, to offer sacrifice to God.
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Poole: 1Sa 15:13 - -- Blessed be thou of the Lord I thank thee, and I beg that God would bless thee, for sending me upon this employment, and giving me this opportunity of...
Blessed be thou of the Lord I thank thee, and I beg that God would bless thee, for sending me upon this employment, and giving me this opportunity of manifesting my obedience to God.
I have performed the commandment of the Lord to wit, for the main and substance of it, to wit, the extirpation of that wicked people; for he thought the sparing of Agag and the cattle very inconsiderable in the case, though indeed it was expressly contrary to God’ s command; but self-interest made him exceeding partial in his own cause: or else, like a bold hypocrite, he pretends that for his part he had obeyed God; resolving, it seems, to cast the blame upon the people, as he did.
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How can this evidence of guilt consist with the profession of thy innocency?
Lord, in gratitude for so great an honour. (Haydock)
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Haydock: 1Sa 15:2 - -- Reckoned up. God speaks in a human manner, as if he had been reading the history of ancient times, Exodus xvii. 14. (Menochius) ---
The Amalecite...
Reckoned up. God speaks in a human manner, as if he had been reading the history of ancient times, Exodus xvii. 14. (Menochius) ---
The Amalecites had treated Israel with inhumanity, above 400 years before. God's vengeance is often slow, but only so much the more terrible. (Calmet) ---
Hebrew pakadti, I have visited, or will punish and remember.
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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)
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Haydock: 1Sa 15:4 - -- As lambs. This comparison is very common, Isaias xl. 11., and Ezechiel xxxiv. 2. But many translate the Hebrew "in Telaim." St. Jerome reads Hebre...
As lambs. This comparison is very common, Isaias xl. 11., and Ezechiel xxxiv. 2. But many translate the Hebrew "in Telaim." St. Jerome reads Hebrew c, as, instead of b, in, with greater propriety. Septuagint and Josephus, "in Galgal," which in effect would have been the most proper place for rendezvous. (Calmet) ---
Footmen. Vatican Septuagint, "400,000 ranks or standards, (Josephus, men) and Juda 30,000."
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Haydock: 1Sa 15:5 - -- Amelac. The people dwelt in tents, and removed from one place to another. So in Ethiopia there are properly no cities, the place where the prince e...
Amelac. The people dwelt in tents, and removed from one place to another. So in Ethiopia there are properly no cities, the place where the prince encamps is deemed the capital. (Calmet) ---
Torrent. Hebrew, or "valley."
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Haydock: 1Sa 15:6 - -- Egypt. See Judges i. 16., Exodus xviii. 12., and Numbers x. 31., and xxiv. 21. Saul gave private instructions to the Cinite, who had been settled a...
Egypt. See Judges i. 16., Exodus xviii. 12., and Numbers x. 31., and xxiv. 21. Saul gave private instructions to the Cinite, who had been settled at Arad, and had mixed with Amalec, to depart. (Calmet)
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Haydock: 1Sa 15:7 - -- Sur. See Genesis ii. 11., and xvi. 7., and xxv. 18., and Exodus xv. 22. (Menochius) ---
These people had occupied a great part of the country, fro...
Sur. See Genesis ii. 11., and xvi. 7., and xxv. 18., and Exodus xv. 22. (Menochius) ---
These people had occupied a great part of the country, from the Persian Gulf to Egypt. (Haydock)
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Haydock: 1Sa 15:9 - -- Garments. Hebrew is commonly rendered, "fatlings." Septuagint, "eatables." (Calmet) ---
Avarice seems to have actuated Saul, (Lyranus) or a false...
Garments. Hebrew is commonly rendered, "fatlings." Septuagint, "eatables." (Calmet) ---
Avarice seems to have actuated Saul, (Lyranus) or a false pity, (Josephus) or a desire to grace his triumph, ver. 12. (Glossa.) (Menochius)
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Haydock: 1Sa 15:11 - -- Repenteth. God cannot change: but he often acts exteriorly as one who repents. He alters his conduct when men prove rebellious. (St. Justin Martyr...
Repenteth. God cannot change: but he often acts exteriorly as one who repents. He alters his conduct when men prove rebellious. (St. Justin Martyr, p. 22.) ---
Grieved. Hebrew, "indignant." (Calmet) ---
He was sorry to think that Saul would now lose his temporal, and perhaps his eternal crown. (Salien) ---
"The choice of Judas and of Saul, do not prove that God is ignorant of future events, but rather that he is a Judge of the present." (St. Jerome in Ezechiel ii.)
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Haydock: 1Sa 15:12 - -- Arch. Here we behold what a change prosperity makes in the manners of those who before shewed the greatest humility. Saul erects a monument to his ...
Arch. Here we behold what a change prosperity makes in the manners of those who before shewed the greatest humility. Saul erects a monument to his own vanity. Hebrew, "he has set him up a hand," (as Absalom did, 2 Kings xviii. 18.) or "a place" to divide the booty, (Jonathan) or "a garrison," to keep the country in subjection. (Calmet) ---
Perhaps he erected the figure of "a hand," as an emblem of strength, and in honour of Benjamin, "the son of the right hand," of whose tribe he was. (Haydock)
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Haydock: 1Sa 15:14 - -- Hear, and which manifestly prove, that God's order has not been put in execution. (Menochius)
Hear, and which manifestly prove, that God's order has not been put in execution. (Menochius)
Gill: 1Sa 15:1 - -- Samuel also said unto Saul,.... When and where he said to him what follows, it is not easy to determine, perhaps at Gilgal, where they after met again...
Samuel also said unto Saul,.... When and where he said to him what follows, it is not easy to determine, perhaps at Gilgal, where they after met again:
the Lord sent me to anoint thee to be king over his people, over Israel; that is, he gave him orders to anoint him king of Israel, otherwise Saul was in providence sent to Samuel to be anointed, and not Samuel to Saul:
now therefore hearken thou unto the voice of the words of the Lord; for so great a favour, and such high honour he had conferred on him, laid him under great obligation to obey the commands of the Lord; and whereas he had been deficient in one instance before, for which he had been reproved, he suggests, that now he should take care to observe and do, particularly and punctually, what should be enjoined him.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:2 - -- Thus saith the Lord of hosts,.... Of the celestial host of angels, and of the army of Israel, yea, of all the armies of the earth: this is premised to...
Thus saith the Lord of hosts,.... Of the celestial host of angels, and of the army of Israel, yea, of all the armies of the earth: this is premised to engage the attention of Saul:
I remember that which Amalek did to Israel; four hundred years ago:
how he laid wait for him in the way when he came up from Egypt; in the valley of Rephidim, just before they came to Mount Sinai, and fell upon the rear of them, and smote the feeble, and faint, and weary, see Exo 17:8
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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.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:4 - -- And Saul gathered the people together,.... Or "made them to hear" r, by the sound of a trumpet; or by sending heralds into all parts of the land to pr...
And Saul gathered the people together,.... Or "made them to hear" r, by the sound of a trumpet; or by sending heralds into all parts of the land to proclaim the above order of the Lord, and summon them to come to him, perhaps at Gilgal; so the Septuagint version, and Josephus s:
and numbered them in Telaim; thought to be the same with Telem, a place in the tribe of Judah, Jos 15:24, the word signifies "lambs"; hence the Vulgate Latin version is,"he numbered them as lambs;''and the Jews t say, because it was forbid to number the children of Israel, which was the sin of David; therefore every man had a lamb given him, and so the lambs were numbered, by which it was known what was the number of the people; and the Targum says, this was done with the passover lambs, it being now the time of the passover; but the numbering here made was not of the people of the land in general, and so there was no occasion of such a precaution, only a numbering and mustering of the army when got together and rendezvoused in one place: the sum of which is here given:
two hundred thousand footmen and ten thousand men of Judah; which last were reckoned separately, as distinct from the other tribes of Israel, to show their obedience to Saul, who was of another tribe, though the kingdom was promised to theirs; but R. Isaiah observes, that the reason why so few of the men of Judah came, in comparison of the other tribes, was, because they envied the government being in one of the tribe of Benjamin, when they thought it should have been in one of theirs; the number is greatly increased in the Septuagint version, which makes the whole to be 400,000, and 30,000 men of Judah; and so Josephus u.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:5 - -- And Saul came to a city of Amalek,.... With his army, perhaps the nearest city of it to the land of Israel; though some think that Amalek was the name...
And Saul came to a city of Amalek,.... With his army, perhaps the nearest city of it to the land of Israel; though some think that Amalek was the name of the city, and was the metropolis of the nation, and had its name from thence: and laid wait in the valley; which was near the city, to intercept the inhabitants when they should come out against him: or "he contended" w as some render it, he fought with them there; the Targum,"he ordered his army,''set them in battle array, or pitched his camp there.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:6 - -- And Saul said unto the Kenites,.... Who were of the posterity of Jethro the father-in-law of Moses, or related to him; why Josephus x calls them the n...
And Saul said unto the Kenites,.... Who were of the posterity of Jethro the father-in-law of Moses, or related to him; why Josephus x calls them the nation of the Sicimites, who dwelt in the midst of the land of Midian, I know not:
go, depart, get ye down from among the Amalekites; for though some of these people came with Israel into the land of Canaan, and were first at Jericho, and then came into the wilderness of Judah, Jdg 1:16 and were in other tribes also; yet as they removed from place to place, and from country to country, for the convenience of their flocks and herds, they dwelling in tents, might come into the country of Amalek and pitch there, and as they chose to dwell in rocks, and the caverns of them, to be near their flocks and herds in the valleys, they are called upon to get down from thence, see Num 24:21.
lest I destroy you with them; they dwelling among the Amalekites, might perish with them; and especially as the Amalekites, upon their being routed, would naturally flee to the rocks, hills, and mountains, where these people had their tents, they would be in the greater danger of being destroyed with them, unless they removed:
for ye showed kindness to all the children of Israel when they came up out of Egypt; as Jethro, by the advice he gave to Moses to appoint proper officers in Israel, and Hobab, by being eyes to the people, in conducting them through the wilderness, and accompanying them to the land of Canaan:
so the Kenites departed from among the Amalekites; took the advice of Saul, and removed and pitched their tents, elsewhere.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:7 - -- And Saul smote the Amalekites,.... Engaging in battle with them, he overcame them, and beat them, and slew great numbers of them:
from Havilah unti...
And Saul smote the Amalekites,.... Engaging in battle with them, he overcame them, and beat them, and slew great numbers of them:
from Havilah until thou comest to Shur, that is over against Egypt; having routed them in the valley, or in whatsoever place the battle was fought, he pursued them from one end of their country to the other; from Havilah, which lay to the northeast, to Shur, which lay to the southwest, and destroyed all that came in his way between those two points, see Gen 25:18.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:8 - -- And he took Agag the king of the Amalekites alive,.... This name seems to be a common name of the kings of these people, as Pharaoh was of the Egyptia...
And he took Agag the king of the Amalekites alive,.... This name seems to be a common name of the kings of these people, as Pharaoh was of the Egyptians, see Num 24:2. When this king fell into the hands of Saul, he did not put him to death, as he should have done, but preserved him; for what reasons, see in the following verse:
and utterly destroyed all the people with the edge of the sword; that is, all that came in his way, or fell into his hands; all between Havilah and Shur; all excepting those that made their escape, for we after read of Amalekites, and that in large bodies, 1Sa 27:8.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:9 - -- And Saul and all the people spared Agag,.... Perhaps Saul made the motion to spare him, and the people agreed to it; it may be, out of respect to him ...
And Saul and all the people spared Agag,.... Perhaps Saul made the motion to spare him, and the people agreed to it; it may be, out of respect to him as a king; or because of the comeliness of his person, the height of his stature, and the largeness of his body, as Josephus y notes; or to carry him in triumph in a public show, see 1Sa 15:12.
and the best of the sheep, and of the oxen, and of the fatlings; or "of the second sort", as in the margin, the second best; or rather which shed their two long teeth, as sheep at two years old did when reckoned at their full strength, and fittest for sacrifice z:
and the lambs, and all that was good, and would not utterly destroy them; as they were commanded, but kept them for their own private use and advantage, and this not only the best and fattest of the flocks and herds, but of their household goods:
but everything that was vile and refuse, that they destroyed utterly: such of the cattle that were poor and lean, lame or blind, or had any defect in them, and household goods that were mere rubbish and lumber; such they entirely destroyed, killed the creatures, and burnt the goods; in doing which they thought they fulfilled the will of God.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:10 - -- Then came the word of the Lord unto Samuel,.... The word of prophecy, as the Targum; this came to him in a dream or vision, or by an articulate voice:...
Then came the word of the Lord unto Samuel,.... The word of prophecy, as the Targum; this came to him in a dream or vision, or by an articulate voice:
saying; as follows.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:11 - -- It repenteth me that I have set up Saul to be king,.... Which is not to be understood of any change of mind, counsel, purpose, or decree in God, which...
It repenteth me that I have set up Saul to be king,.... Which is not to be understood of any change of mind, counsel, purpose, or decree in God, which is not consistent with his unchangeable nature; but of a change of dispensation, and outward dealings, and is spoken after the manner of men, who, when they repent of anything, change the course of their conduct and behaviour; and so the Lord does without any change of his mind and will, which alters not; and though he changes the outward dispensations of his providence, yet he never changes and alters in the matters and methods of his grace; though he repented he made Saul king, he never repents of his making his saints kings and priests for himself; his outward gifts he sometimes takes away, as an earthly crown and kingdom; but his gifts and calling, which are of special grace, are without repentance; see Gill on Gen 6:6.
for he is turned back from following me; from after my worship, as the Targum, from doing his will and work:
and hath not performed my commandments: particularly in this affair relating to Amalek:
and it grieved Samuel; that Saul should so soon be rejected from being king, and that he should do anything to deserve it; and whom Samuel had anointed king, and for whom he had a cordial respect, and to whom he wished well, both for his own personal good, and for the good of the people of Israel; so far was he from rejoicing at his fall, who came in his stead, and to whom he gave way in the affair of government:
and he cried unto the Lord all night; or prayed, as the Targum; either that the Lord would inform him of the particulars wherein Saul had done amiss, or that he would forgive his sin, and not reject him from the kingdom.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:12 - -- And when Samuel rose early to meet Saul in the morning,.... Having had no sleep since the revelation of the will of God was made unto him, and therefo...
And when Samuel rose early to meet Saul in the morning,.... Having had no sleep since the revelation of the will of God was made unto him, and therefore rose early, being in haste to converse with Saul about it:
it was told Samuel, saying, Saul came to Carmel; not to Carmel where Elijah offered sacrifice, for that was very remote from hence; but to Carmel, a city in the tribe of Judah, which lay in the way of Saul's return from Amalek, Jos 15:55.
and, behold, he set him up a place; to divide his spoil in, as the Targum; or to encamp in, as Kimchi; or to build an altar on, as Jarchi, who takes it to be the same that Elisha after repaired; but, as before observed, this place was at a great distance from Mount Carmel where Elijah sacrificed. The word for a "place" signifies a hand; and, according to the Vulgate Latin version, it was a triumphal arch, and was perhaps an obelisk or pillar, a trophy or monument erected in memory of the victory he had obtained over the Amalekites. So Jerom says a, when a victory was obtained, they used to make an arch of myrtle, palm, and olive branches, a sign of it; these trophies were sometimes of brass, sometimes of marble; some were only heaps of stones, others a remarkable tree with the branches cut off b so the pillar Absalom erected is called his hand, 2Sa 18:18.
and is gone about, and passed on, and gone down to Gilgal; he took a circuit, and moved in great pomp and parade, carrying the king of the Amalekites in triumph with him, and the spoil he had taken and reserves. To Gilgal be went, expecting to meet Samuel there, and offer up peace offerings to the Lord for the victory he had got.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:13 - -- And Samuel came to Saul,.... At Gilgal:
and Saul said unto him, blessed be thou of the Lord; signifying that he had abundant reason to bless the Lo...
And Samuel came to Saul,.... At Gilgal:
and Saul said unto him, blessed be thou of the Lord; signifying that he had abundant reason to bless the Lord on his account, not only that he had anointed him king, but had sent him on such an errand, in which he had succeeded so well, and it was a pleasure to him that he might report it to him:
I have performed the commandment of the Lord; either he was really ignorant that he had done amiss; and thought that his sparing Agag, when he had destroyed all the rest, and reserving some of the best of the cattle for sacrifice, could not be interpreted a breach of the orders given him; or if he was conscious he had broken the commandment of the Lord, this he said to prevent Samuel's reproof of him, and to sooth him with flattering words.
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Gill: 1Sa 15:14 - -- And Samuel said, what meaneth then this bleating of the sheep in mine ears,.... For the orders were to destroy all living creatures belonging to the A...
And Samuel said, what meaneth then this bleating of the sheep in mine ears,.... For the orders were to destroy all living creatures belonging to the Amalekites, 1Sa 15:3 if therefore Saul had performed the commandment of the Lord, as he said he had, from whence were these sheep Samuel heard bleating?
and the lowing of the oxen which I hear? where do they come from? these questions he put to convict him of the falsehood he had delivered; the bleating and lowing of these creatures proved him a liar, and were witnesses of his breach of the divine command; and one would think every bleating and lowing of these must alarm his conscience, unless dreadfully stupefied.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: 1Sa 15:2 Heb “he”; the referent (Israel) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
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NET Notes: 1Sa 15:6 The translation follows the Syriac Peshitta and Vulgate which assume a reading אֶסִפְךָ (’esf...
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NET Notes: 1Sa 15:8 Heb “all the people.” For clarity “Agag’s” has been supplied in the translation.
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NET Notes: 1Sa 15:9 The MT has here the very odd form נְמִבְזָה (nÿmivzah), but this is apparently due to a scr...
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NET Notes: 1Sa 15:12 At the end of v. 12 the LXX and one Old Latin ms include the following words not found in the MT: “to Saul. And behold, he was offering as a bur...
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NET Notes: 1Sa 15:14 The words “if that is the case” are supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.
Geneva Bible: 1Sa 15:1 Samuel also said unto Saul, The LORD sent me to anoint thee [to be] king over his people, over Israel: now therefore ( a ) hearken thou unto the voice...
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Geneva Bible: 1Sa 15:3 Now go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them not; but ( b ) slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sh...
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Geneva Bible: 1Sa 15:6 And Saul said unto the ( c ) Kenites, Go, depart, get you down from among the Amalekites, lest I destroy you with them: for ye shewed ( d ) kindness t...
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Geneva Bible: 1Sa 15:11 It ( e ) repenteth me that I have set up Saul [to be] king: for he is turned back from following me, and hath not performed my commandments. And it gr...
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Geneva Bible: 1Sa 15:13 And Samuel came to Saul: and Saul said unto him, Blessed [be] thou of the LORD: I have performed the ( f ) commandment of the LORD.
( f ) This is the...
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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...
Maclaren -> 1Sa 15:10-23
Maclaren: 1Sa 15:10-23 - --1 Samuel 15:10-23
Again the narrative takes us to Gilgal,--a fateful place for Saul. There they made Saul king before the Lord'; there he had taken th...
MHCC -> 1Sa 15:1-9; 1Sa 15:10-23
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...
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MHCC: 1Sa 15:10-23 - --Repentance in God is not a change of mind, as it is in us, but a change of method. The change was in Saul; " He is turned back from following me." He...
Matthew Henry -> 1Sa 15:1-9; 1Sa 15:10-23
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 ...
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Matthew Henry: 1Sa 15:10-23 - -- Saul is here called to account by Samuel concerning the execution of his commission against the Amalekites; and remarkable instances we are here fur...
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...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 1Sa 15:4-9 - --
Saul summoned the people to war, and mustered them (those who weresummoned) at Telaim (this was probably the same place as the Telem mentioned in ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 1Sa 15:10-11 - --
The word of the Lord came to Samuel: " It repenteth me that I have madeSaul king, for he hath turned away from me, and not set up (carried out) my w...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 1Sa 15:12 - --
The next morning, after receiving the revelation from God (1Sa 15:11), Samuelrose up early, to go and meet Saul as he was returning from the war. On...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 1Sa 15:13 - --
When Samuel met him there, Saul attempted to hide his consciousness ofguilt by a feigned friendly welcome. " Blessed be thou of the Lord "(vid.,Rth ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: 1Sa 15:14-15 - --
But the prophet stripped his hypocrisy at once with the question, " Whatthen is this bleating of sheep in my ears, and a lowing of oxen that I hear?...
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...
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Constable: 1Sa 15:1-35 - --5. Yahweh's final rejection of Saul ch. 15
"In the short pericope 13:7b-15a obedience was the st...
Guzik -> 1Sa 15:1-35
Guzik: 1Sa 15:1-35 - --1 Samuel 15 - God Rejects Saul as King
A. Battle against the Amalekites.
1. (1-3) A clear, radical command: destroy Amalek.
Samuel also said to Sa...
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expand allCommentary -- Other
Contradiction: 1Sa 15:10 92. Does God change his mind (Genesis 6:7; Exodus 32:14; 1 Samuel 15:10-11, 35), or does he not change his mind (1 Samuel 15:29)? } }
(Category: mis...
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Contradiction: 1Sa 15:11 92. Does God change his mind (Genesis 6:7; Exodus 32:14; 1 Samuel 15:10-11, 35), or does he not change his mind (1 Samuel 15:29)? } }
(Category: mis...
Critics Ask: 1Sa 15:2 1 SAMUEL 15:2-3 —Why did God destroy the Amalekites? PROBLEM: God is depicted in the Bible as a God of mercy and compassion, freely forgiving t...
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Critics Ask: 1Sa 15:3 1 SAMUEL 15:2-3 —Why did God destroy the Amalekites? PROBLEM: God is depicted in the Bible as a God of mercy and compassion, freely forgiving t...
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