
Text -- 1 Samuel 17:1-5 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: 1Sa 17:1 - -- _Probably they had heard, that Samuel had forsaken Saul, and that Saul himself was unfit for business. The enemies of the church are watchful to take ...
_Probably they had heard, that Samuel had forsaken Saul, and that Saul himself was unfit for business. The enemies of the church are watchful to take all advantages, and they never have greater advantage, than when her protectors have provoked God's Spirit and prophets to leave them.

Wesley: 1Sa 17:4 - -- At least, nine feet, nine inches high. And this is not strange; for besides the giants mentioned in Scripture, Herodotus, Diodorus Siculus, and Pliny,...
At least, nine feet, nine inches high. And this is not strange; for besides the giants mentioned in Scripture, Herodotus, Diodorus Siculus, and Pliny, make mention of persons seven cubits high.

Made of brass plates laid over one another, like the scales of a fish.

Wesley: 1Sa 17:5 - -- The common shekel contained a fourth part of an ounce; and so five thousand shekels made one thousand two hundred and fifty ounces, or seventy - eight...
The common shekel contained a fourth part of an ounce; and so five thousand shekels made one thousand two hundred and fifty ounces, or seventy - eight pounds: which weight is not unsuitable to a man of such vast strength as his height speaks him to be.
JFB: 1Sa 17:1 - -- Twenty-seven years after their overthrow at Michmash. Having now recovered their spirits and strength, they sought an opportunity of wiping out the in...
Twenty-seven years after their overthrow at Michmash. Having now recovered their spirits and strength, they sought an opportunity of wiping out the infamy of that national disaster, as well as to regain their lost ascendency over Israel.

JFB: 1Sa 17:1 - -- Now Shuweikeh, a town in the western plains of Judah (Jos 15:35), nine Roman miles from Eleutheropolis, toward Jerusalem [ROBINSON].
Now Shuweikeh, a town in the western plains of Judah (Jos 15:35), nine Roman miles from Eleutheropolis, toward Jerusalem [ROBINSON].

JFB: 1Sa 17:1 - -- Or, "Pas-dammim" (1Ch 11:13), "the portion" or "effusion of blood," situated between the other two.
Or, "Pas-dammim" (1Ch 11:13), "the portion" or "effusion of blood," situated between the other two.

JFB: 1Sa 17:2 - -- That is, "the Terebinth," now Wady Er-Sumt [ROBINSON]. Another valley somewhat to the north, now called Wady Beit Hanina, has been fixed on by the tra...
That is, "the Terebinth," now Wady Er-Sumt [ROBINSON]. Another valley somewhat to the north, now called Wady Beit Hanina, has been fixed on by the tradition of ages.

JFB: 1Sa 17:4-11 - -- Hebrew, a "man between two"; that is, a person who, on the part of his own people, undertook to determine the national quarrel by engaging in single c...
Hebrew, a "man between two"; that is, a person who, on the part of his own people, undertook to determine the national quarrel by engaging in single combat with a chosen warrior in the hostile army.

JFB: 1Sa 17:5 - -- The Philistine helmet had the appearance of a row of feathers set in a tiara, or metal band, to which were attached scales of the same material, for t...
The Philistine helmet had the appearance of a row of feathers set in a tiara, or metal band, to which were attached scales of the same material, for the defense of the neck and the sides of the face [OSBORN].

JFB: 1Sa 17:5 - -- A kind of corslet, quilted with leather or plates of metal, reaching only to the chest, and supported by shoulder straps, leaving the shoulders and ar...
A kind of corslet, quilted with leather or plates of metal, reaching only to the chest, and supported by shoulder straps, leaving the shoulders and arms at full liberty.
Clarke: 1Sa 17:1 - -- Now the Philistines gathered together - Calmet thinks that this war happened eight years after the anointing of David, and ten or twelve years after...
Now the Philistines gathered together - Calmet thinks that this war happened eight years after the anointing of David, and ten or twelve years after the war with the Amalekites. We have already seen that there was war between Saul and the Philistines all his days. See 1Sa 14:52

Clarke: 1Sa 17:1 - -- Shochoh and Azekah - Places which lay to the south of Jerusalem and to the west of Bethlehem; about five leagues from the former. Ephes-dammim was s...
Shochoh and Azekah - Places which lay to the south of Jerusalem and to the west of Bethlehem; about five leagues from the former. Ephes-dammim was somewhere in the vicinity, but it is not known where. See Calmet.

Clarke: 1Sa 17:2 - -- The valley of Elah - Some translate this the turpentine valley, or the valley of the terebinth trees; and others, the valley of oaks. The situation ...
The valley of Elah - Some translate this the turpentine valley, or the valley of the terebinth trees; and others, the valley of oaks. The situation of this valley is well known.

Clarke: 1Sa 17:3 - -- The Philistines stood on a mountain - These were two eminences or hills, from which they could see and talk with each other.
The Philistines stood on a mountain - These were two eminences or hills, from which they could see and talk with each other.

Clarke: 1Sa 17:4 - -- There went out a champion - Our word champion comes from campus, the field; Campio est enim ille qui pugnat in campo, hoc est, in castris , "Champio...
There went out a champion - Our word champion comes from campus, the field; Campio est enim ille qui pugnat in campo, hoc est, in castris , "Champion is he, properly, who fights in the field; i.e., in camps."A man well skilled in arms, strong, brave, and patriotic
But is this the meaning of the original

Clarke: 1Sa 17:4 - -- Whose height was six cubits and a span - The word cubit signifies the length from cubitus , the elbow, to the top of the middle finger, which is gen...
Whose height was six cubits and a span - The word cubit signifies the length from cubitus , the elbow, to the top of the middle finger, which is generally rated at one foot six inches. The span is the distance from the top of the middle finger to the end of the thumb, when extended as far as they can stretch on a plain; this is ordinarily nine inches. Were we sure that these were the measures, and their extent, which are intended in the original words, we could easily ascertain the height of this Philistine; it would then be nine feet nine inches, which is a tremendous height for a man
But the versions are not all agreed in his height. The Septuagint read

Clarke: 1Sa 17:5 - -- He was armed with a coat of mail - The words in the original, שרון קשקשים shiryon kaskassim , mean a coat of mail formed of plates of bra...
He was armed with a coat of mail - The words in the original,
With thin plates of brass or iron, overlapping each other, were the ancient coats of mail formed in different countries; many formed in this way may be now seen in the tower of London

Clarke: 1Sa 17:5 - -- The weight - five thousand shekels - Following Bishop Cumberland’ s tables, and rating the shekel at two hundred and nineteen grains, and the R...
The weight - five thousand shekels - Following Bishop Cumberland’ s tables, and rating the shekel at two hundred and nineteen grains, and the Roman ounce at four hundred and thirty-eight grains, we find that Goliath’ s coat of mail, weighing five thousand shekels, was exactly one hundred and fifty-six pounds four ounces avoirdupois. A vast weight for a coat of mail, but not all out of proportion to the man.
Defender -> 1Sa 17:4
TSK: 1Sa 17:1 - -- gathered : 1Sa 7:7, 1Sa 13:5, 1Sa 14:46, 1Sa 14:52; Jdg 3:3
Shochoh : Jos 15:35, Socoh, 2Ch 11:7, Shoco, 2Ch 28:18, Shocho
Azekah : Jos 10:10, Jos 10:...

TSK: 1Sa 17:2 - -- the valley : 1Sa 17:19, 1Sa 21:9
set the battle in array : Heb. ranged the battle

TSK: 1Sa 17:4 - -- Goliath : 1Sa 17:23, 1Sa 21:9, 1Sa 21:10; 2Sa 21:19; 1Ch 20:5
of Gath : 1Sa 27:4; Jos 11:22; 2Sa 21:16-22; 1Ch 20:4-8
whose height : Deu 3:11; 1Ch 11:...
Goliath : 1Sa 17:23, 1Sa 21:9, 1Sa 21:10; 2Sa 21:19; 1Ch 20:5
of Gath : 1Sa 27:4; Jos 11:22; 2Sa 21:16-22; 1Ch 20:4-8
whose height : Deu 3:11; 1Ch 11:23; Amo 2:9
six cubits : According to Bp. Cumberland’ s calculation, the height of Goliath was about eleven feet ten inches; but Parkhurst estimating the ordinary cubit at seventeen inches and a half, calculates that he was nine feet six inches high. Few instances can be produced of men who can be compared with him. Pliny says, ""The tallest man that hath been seen in our days was one name Gabara, who, in the days of Claudius, the late Emperor, was brought out of Arabiacaps1 . hcaps0 e was nine feet nine inches.""Josephus mentions a Jew, named Eleazar, whom Vitellius sent to Rome, who was seven cubits, or ten feet two inches high. Becanus saw a man near ten feet, and a woman that was full ten feet. And, to mention no more, a man of the name of John Middleton, born at Hale, near Warrington, in Lancashire, in the reign of James the First, was more than nine feet high. Dr. Plott, in his history of Staffordshire, says, that ""his hand, from the carpus to the end of the middle finger, was seventeen inches, his palms eight inches and a half broad, and his whole height was nine feet three inches; wanting but six inches of the height of Goliath of Gath.""

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 1Sa 17:1 - -- The narrative reverts to the Philistine wars 1Sa 14:52; the other introductory details concerning Saul’ s rejection, and David’ s introduc...
The narrative reverts to the Philistine wars 1Sa 14:52; the other introductory details concerning Saul’ s rejection, and David’ s introduction upon the stage of the history, having been disposed of in the intermediate chapters.
Shochoh which belongeth to Judah - See the marginal reference which places Shochoh and Azekah in the "Shephelah"or maritime plain, and 2Ch 28:18, "Shochoh"now "Shuweikeh,""nine miles from Eleutheropolis,"Jerome.
Ephes-dammim - Called "Happas-dammim"(Pas-dammim, 1Ch 11:13), "the end of bloodshed,"now "Damun,"about 4 miles northeast of Shuweikeh.

Barnes: 1Sa 17:2 - -- The valley of Elah - i. e., of the terebinth, now called Wady es Sunt, from the acacias which are scattered in it.
The valley of Elah - i. e., of the terebinth, now called Wady es Sunt, from the acacias which are scattered in it.

Barnes: 1Sa 17:3 - -- (In the middle of the broad open valley 1Sa 17:2 is a deep trench 1Sa 17:3 with vertical sides, a valley within a valley: the sides and bed of the t...

Barnes: 1Sa 17:4 - -- A champion - literally, "a man between the two camps:"i. e., one who did not fight in the ranks like an ordinary soldier, but came forth into t...
A champion - literally, "a man between the two camps:"i. e., one who did not fight in the ranks like an ordinary soldier, but came forth into the space between the hostile camps to challenge the mightiest man of his enemies to come and fight him.
Goliath of Gath - One of the places mentioned in Jos 11:22 as still retaining a remnant of the sons of Anak; Gaza and Ashdod being the others. The race of giants (the Rephaim, from
Six cubits ... - If the cubit, the length from the elbow to the tip of the middle finger, is about 1 12 feet; and the span, the distance from the thumb to the middle or little finger, when stretched apart to the full length, be half a cubit, six cubits and a span would equal about nine feet nine inches. The bed of Og king of Bashan was nine cubits long Deu 3:11.

Barnes: 1Sa 17:5 - -- Coat of mail - Or "breastplate of scales."A kind of metal shirt, protecting the back as well as the breast, and made of scales like those of a ...
Coat of mail - Or "breastplate of scales."A kind of metal shirt, protecting the back as well as the breast, and made of scales like those of a fish; as was the corselet of Rameses III, now in the British Museum. The terms, helmet, coat, and clothed (armed the King James Version) are the same as those used in Isa 59:17.
Five thousand shekels - Probably about 157 pounds avoirdupois (see Exo 38:12). It is very probable that Goliath’ s brass coat may have been long preserved as a trophy, as we know his sword was, and so the weight of it ascertained.
Poole: 1Sa 17:3 - -- On a mountain on the other side where they had disposed and fortified their cams, that if the one should assault the other, the assailant should have...
On a mountain on the other side where they had disposed and fortified their cams, that if the one should assault the other, the assailant should have the disadvantage, and be obliged to fight from a lower place.

Poole: 1Sa 17:4 - -- A champion Heb. a man between two , either because he used to come forth, and stand between the two armies; or because he moved that the business sh...
A champion Heb. a man between two , either because he used to come forth, and stand between the two armies; or because he moved that the business should be decided between two, whereof he would be one.
Whose height was six cubits and a span which is not strange, for besides the giants mentioned in Scripture, Herodotus, Diodorus Siculus, and Pliny, and others, make mention of persons seven cubits high, which is near double to an ordinary man’ s height.

Poole: 1Sa 17:5 - -- The common shekel contained only a fourth part of an ounce; and so 5000 shekels made 1250 ounces, which make exactly 78 pounds; which weight is not ...
The common shekel contained only a fourth part of an ounce; and so 5000 shekels made 1250 ounces, which make exactly 78 pounds; which weight is not unsuitable to a man of such vast greatness and strength, as his height speaks him to be.
Haydock: 1Sa 17:1 - -- Up, or proceeding into the vale. (Menochius) ---
Camp. Hebrew, "ranks, or armies."
Up, or proceeding into the vale. (Menochius) ---
Camp. Hebrew, "ranks, or armies."

Haydock: 1Sa 17:1 - -- Battle. They perhaps had heard of Saul's malady, (Salien) and bore a constant hatred to the Israelites during his reign, chap. xiv. 52. ---
Azeca, ...
Battle. They perhaps had heard of Saul's malady, (Salien) and bore a constant hatred to the Israelites during his reign, chap. xiv. 52. ---
Azeca, about 15 miles south of Jerusalem. ---
Dommim, or Phesdommim, 1 Paralipomenon xi. 13.

Terebinth. Hebrew ela, "the oak." (Aquila)

Haydock: 1Sa 17:4 - -- Base-born. Hebrew, "of two sons," or of obscure origin. (Cornelius a Lapide) ---
His parents are no where specified, as Arapha is not, as some pre...
Base-born. Hebrew, "of two sons," or of obscure origin. (Cornelius a Lapide) ---
His parents are no where specified, as Arapha is not, as some pretend, the name of his mother, but denotes that he was of the race of the Raphaim, 2 Kings xxi. 16. Some translate, a man who challenges to fight a duel, or one who comes into the midst as "a champion," to decide the cause of all the rest. Thus the Gaul defied the most valiant of the Romans, but was slain by M. Torquatus, Livy vii. Septuagint, "A strong man went out from the station," &c. Chaldean, "There came out from them, out of the camp of the Philistines, a man named Goliath." But many able interpreters adhere to the Vulgate. ---
Span, about 12½ feet, so that he was taller than two common men. Those who call in question the existence of giants, will surely have nothing to object to this formal proof from Scripture. (Calmet) ---
The Vatican Septuagint and Josephus read, however, "four cubits and a span," or near eight feet. (Kennicott) ---
Some reduce his height to 11 feet 3 inches, or even to 9 feet 9 inches, English. (Haydock) ---
His helmet weighed 15 pounds, avoirdupois; his collar, or buckler, about 30; the head of his spear (26 feet long) weighed about 38 pounds; his sword 4; his greaves on his legs 30; and his coat of mail 156: total, 273 pounds. (Button.) (Haydock) ---
Goliath was a figure of the devil, or of any arch-heretic, who provoketh the Church of God, but is slain by the humble with his own weapons. (Worthington)

Haydock: 1Sa 17:5 - -- Scales, like those of fishes. Septuagint insinuate, that it was armed with things resembling fish-hooks; Greek: alisidoton, hamata. ---
Brass, ...
Scales, like those of fishes. Septuagint insinuate, that it was armed with things resembling fish-hooks; Greek: alisidoton, hamata. ---
Brass, which was used for the armour of the ancients. Plutarch (in Demetrio) speaks of a coat of mail weighing forty pounds: the usual weight was twenty pounds. (Lipsius) ---
The strength of the giant must have borne proportion with his size. (Calmet)
Gill: 1Sa 17:1 - -- Now the Philistines gathered together their armies to battle,.... Josephus s says this was not long after the things related in the preceding chapter ...
Now the Philistines gathered together their armies to battle,.... Josephus s says this was not long after the things related in the preceding chapter were transacted; and very probably they had heard of the melancholy and distraction of Saul, and thought it a proper opportunity of avenging themselves on Israel for their last slaughter of them, and for that purpose gathered together their dispersed troops:
and were gathered together at Shochoh, which belongeth to Judah; a city of the tribe of Judah, Jos 15:35, which shows that, notwithstanding their last defeat, they had great footing in the land of Israel, or however had penetrated far into it in this march of theirs:
and pitched between Shochoh and Azekah; which were both in the same tribe, and near one another, of which See Gill on Jos 10:10; see Gill on Jos 15:35.
in Ephesdammim; which, by an apocope of the first letter, is called Pasdammim, 1Ch 11:13 which the Jews t say had this name because there blood ceased.

Gill: 1Sa 17:2 - -- And Saul and the men of Israel were gathered together,.... He being cured, at least being better of his disorder, through the music of David, and alar...
And Saul and the men of Israel were gathered together,.... He being cured, at least being better of his disorder, through the music of David, and alarmed and aroused by the invasion of the Philistines, which might serve to dissipate any remains of it, or prevent its return, got together his forces:
and pitched by the valley of Elah; which Jerom u says Aquila and Theodotion interpret "the valley of the oak"; but the Vulgate Latin version, the valley of Terebinth; which, according to our countryman Sandys w, was four miles from Ramaosophim, where Samuel dwelt; for he says,"after four miles riding, we descended into the valley of Terebinth, famous, though little, for the slaughter of Goliath;''and in the Targum this valley is called the valley of Butma, which in the Arabic language signifies a "terebinth", or turpentine tree; though some translate it "the oak"; and, according to some modern travellers x, to this day it bears a name similar to that; for they say it is"now called the vale of Bitumen, very famous all over those parts for David's victory over Goliath:"
and set the battle in array against the Philistines; prepared to give them battle.

Gill: 1Sa 17:3 - -- And the Philistines stood on a mountain on the one side, and Israel stood on a mountain on the other side, Before the Israelites are said to encamp i...
And the Philistines stood on a mountain on the one side, and Israel stood on a mountain on the other side, Before the Israelites are said to encamp in or by the valley; but here they are said to take the higher ground, and face the Philistines, who were on a mountain or hill on the other side over against them, which Kimchi reconciles thus; the whole or the grand army lay encamped in the valley, and, they that were set in array, or the first ranks, the first battalion, ascended the mountain to meet the Philistines. Vatablus takes it to be the same mountain, that on one part of it the Philistines formed their first battalion, and the rest of the army was in the valley; and on the other part of the mountain the Israelites pitched their camp:
and there was a valley between them; the same as in the preceding verse.

Gill: 1Sa 17:4 - -- And there went out a champion out of the camp of the Philistines,.... Or a "middle person", or a man "between two" y; meaning either one that went and...
And there went out a champion out of the camp of the Philistines,.... Or a "middle person", or a man "between two" y; meaning either one that went and stood between the two armies of Israel and the Philistines, as the Jewish writers generally interpret it: or a "dueller" z, as others, with which our version agrees; one that proposed to fight a duel, and have the war decided by two persons, of which he would be one:
named Goliath of Gath; which was one of the places where the Anakims or giants were driven, and left, in the times of Joshua, and from whom this man descended, Jos 11:22.
whose height was six cubits and a span; and taking a cubit after the calculation of Bishop Cumberland a to be twenty one inches, and more, and a span to be half a cubit, the height of this man was eleven feet four inches, and somewhat more; which need not seem incredible, since the coffin of Orestea, the son of Agamemnon, is said b to be seven cubits long; and Eleazar, a Jew, who because of his size was called the giant, and was presented by Artabanus, king of the Parthians, to Tiberius Caesar, is said by Josephus c to be seven cubits high; and one Gabbara of Arabia, in the times of Claudius Caesar, measured nine feet nine inches, as Pliny d relates, and who elsewhere e speaks of a people in Ethiopia, called Syrbotae, who were eight cubits high; the Septuagint version makes Goliath to be only four cubits and a span high, and so Josephus f; that is, about eight feet.

Gill: 1Sa 17:5 - -- And he had an helmet of brass upon his head,.... This was a piece of armour, which covered the head in the day of battle; these were usually made of t...
And he had an helmet of brass upon his head,.... This was a piece of armour, which covered the head in the day of battle; these were usually made of the skins of beasts, of leather, and which were covered with plates of iron, or brass; and sometimes made of all iron, or of brass g; as this seems to have been:
and he was armed with a coat of mail; which reached from the neck to the middle, and consisted of various plates of brass laid on one another, like the scales of fishes h, so close together that no dart or arrow could pierce between:
and the weight of the coat was five thousand shekels of brass: which made one hundred and fifty six pounds and a quarter of zygostatic or avoirdupois weight; and therefore he must be a very strong man indeed to carry such a weight. So the armour of the ancient Romans were all of brass, as this man's; their helmets, shields, greaves, coats of mail, all of brass, as Livy says i; and so in the age of the Grecian heroes j.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes



NET Notes: 1Sa 17:4 Heb “his height was six cubits and a span” (cf. KJV, NASB, NRSV). A cubit was approximately eighteen inches, a span nine inches. So, accor...

NET Notes: 1Sa 17:5 Although the exact weight of Goliath’s defensive body armor is difficult to estimate in terms of modern equivalency, it was obviously quite heav...
Geneva Bible: 1Sa 17:4 And there ( a ) went out a champion out of the camp of the Philistines, named Goliath, of Gath, whose height [was] six cubits and a span.
( a ) Betwe...

Geneva Bible: 1Sa 17:5 And [he had] an helmet of brass upon his head, and he [was] armed with a coat of mail; and the weight of the coat [was] five thousand ( b ) shekels of...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Sa 17:1-58
TSK Synopsis: 1Sa 17:1-58 - --1 The armies of the Israelites and Philistines being ready to battle,4 Goliath challenges a combat.12 David, sent by his father to visit his brethren,...
MHCC -> 1Sa 17:1-11
MHCC: 1Sa 17:1-11 - --Men so entirely depend upon God in all things, that when he withdraws his help, the most valiant and resolute cannot find their hearts or hands, as da...
Matthew Henry -> 1Sa 17:1-11
Matthew Henry: 1Sa 17:1-11 - -- It was not long ago that the Philistines were soundly beaten, and put to the worse, before Israel, and they would have been totally routed if Saul's...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 1Sa 17:1-54
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Sa 17:1-54 - --
A war between the Philistines and the Israelites furnished David with theopportunity of displaying before Saul and all Israel, and greatly to theter...
Constable: 1Sa 16:1--31:13 - --IV. SAUL AND DAVID 1 Sam. 16--31
The basic theme in Samuel, that blessing, and in particular fertility of all ki...

Constable: 1Sa 16:1--18:6 - --A. David's Rise as the New Anointed 16:1-18:5
According to Swindoll, more was written in the Bible about...

Constable: 1Sa 17:1-58 - --2. The reason for God's selection of David ch. 17
The exciting story of David and Goliath illust...
