
Text -- 1 Samuel 9:21 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> 1Sa 9:21
Wesley: 1Sa 9:21 - -- For so indeed this was, having been all cut off except six hundred, Jdg 20:46-48, which blow they never recovered, and therefore they were scarce reck...
For so indeed this was, having been all cut off except six hundred, Jdg 20:46-48, which blow they never recovered, and therefore they were scarce reckoned as an entire tribe, but only as a remnant of a tribe; and being ingrafted into Judah, in the division between the ten tribes and the two, they in some sort lost their name, and together with Judah were accounted but one tribe.
JFB -> 1Sa 9:20-21; 1Sa 9:21
JFB: 1Sa 9:20-21 - -- This was a covert and indirect premonition of the royal dignity that awaited him; and, though Saul's answer shows that he fully understood it, he affe...
This was a covert and indirect premonition of the royal dignity that awaited him; and, though Saul's answer shows that he fully understood it, he affected to doubt that the prophet was in earnest.

JFB: 1Sa 9:21 - -- By selecting a king from this least and nearly extinct tribe (Jdg 20:46-48), divine wisdom designed to remove all grounds of jealousy among the other ...
By selecting a king from this least and nearly extinct tribe (Jdg 20:46-48), divine wisdom designed to remove all grounds of jealousy among the other tribes.
Clarke -> 1Sa 9:21
Clarke: 1Sa 9:21 - -- Am not I a Benjamite - This speech of Saul is exceedingly modest; he was now becomingly humble; but who can bear elevation and prosperity? The tribe...
Am not I a Benjamite - This speech of Saul is exceedingly modest; he was now becomingly humble; but who can bear elevation and prosperity? The tribe of Benjamin had not yet recovered its strength, after the ruinous war it had with the other tribes, Judges 20:29-46.
TSK -> 1Sa 9:21
TSK: 1Sa 9:21 - -- a Benjamite : Jdg 20:46-48; Psa 68:27
my family : 1Sa 10:27, 1Sa 15:17, 1Sa 18:18, 1Sa 18:23; Jdg 6:14, Jdg 6:15; Hos 13:1; Luk 14:11; Eph 3:8
so to m...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Sa 9:21
Barnes: 1Sa 9:21 - -- The tribe of Benjamin, originally the smallest of all the tribes Num 1:36, if Ephraim and Manasseh are reckoned as one tribe, had been nearly annihi...
The tribe of Benjamin, originally the smallest of all the tribes Num 1:36, if Ephraim and Manasseh are reckoned as one tribe, had been nearly annihilated by the civil war recorded in Judg. 20. It had of course not recovered from that terrible calamity in the time of Saul, and was doubtless literally much the smallest tribe at that time. Nothing could be more improbable, humanly speaking, than that this weak tribe should give a ruler to the mighty tribes of Joseph and Judah.
Poole -> 1Sa 9:21
Poole: 1Sa 9:21 - -- The smallest of the tribes; for so indeed this was, having been all cut off except six hundred, Jud 20 , which blow they never recovered, and theref...
The smallest of the tribes; for so indeed this was, having been all cut off except six hundred, Jud 20 , which blow they never recovered, and therefore they were scarce reckoned as an entire tribe, but only as a remnant or fragment of a tribe; and being ingrafted into Judah, in the division between the ten tribes and the two, they in some sort lost their name, and they, together with Judah, were accounted but one tribe, as 1Ki 11:32 , &c.
The least of all the families of the tribe of Benjamin i.e. one of the least; obscure and inconsiderable, in comparison of divers others; whence it may seem that Saul’ s family was not so noble and wealthy as some imagine: See Poole "1Sa 9:1" .
Wherefore then speakest thou so to me? why dost thou feed me with vain hopes of the kingdom?
Haydock -> 1Sa 9:21
Haydock: 1Sa 9:21 - -- Jemini, or Benjamin, which was always one of the smallest tribes, and, since the unfortunate war, still more reduced; so that none of the other tribe...
Jemini, or Benjamin, which was always one of the smallest tribes, and, since the unfortunate war, still more reduced; so that none of the other tribes could well take umbrage, or be filled with jealousy, when they saw a king selected from it. ---
Last. Though all were equally noble, yet some families were more numerous, possessed greater riches, or had filled the posts of honour more frequently than others. Nothing can be more charming than the modesty of Saul on this occasion. (Calmet) ---
Happy would he have been, had he continued always to cherish the like sentiments. (Haydock) ---
He and his posterity might then have long enjoyed the regal dignity, chap. xiii. 13. (Menochius)
Gill -> 1Sa 9:21
Gill: 1Sa 9:21 - -- And Saul answered and said, am not I a Benjamite,.... Or the son of Jemini, the name of one of his ancestors, see 1Sa 9:1 or rather, as the Targum, a ...
And Saul answered and said, am not I a Benjamite,.... Or the son of Jemini, the name of one of his ancestors, see 1Sa 9:1 or rather, as the Targum, a son of the tribe of Benjamin:
of the smallest of the tribes of Israel? having been greatly reduced, even to the number of six hundred men, by the fatal war between that tribe and the rest, on account of the Levite's concubine, and is called little Benjamin, Psa 68:27.
and my family the least of all the families of the tribe of Benjamin? the smallest in number, had the least share of authority in the tribe, and of land and cattle, wealth and substance:
wherefore then speakest thou so to me? Saul presently understood Samuel's meaning, that he should be chosen king of Israel, the affair of a king being at this time in everyone's mind and mouth; but could not believe that one of so small a tribe, and which sprung from the youngest son of Jacob, and of so mean a family, would be raised to such dignity, but that a person of great figure and character would be settled upon; and, therefore he took Samuel to be in joke, as Josephus m says, and not in earnest.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Sa 9:1-27
TSK Synopsis: 1Sa 9:1-27 - --1 Saul despairing to find his father's asses,6 by the counsel of his servant,11 and direction of young maidens,15 according to God's revelation,18 com...
Maclaren -> 1Sa 9:15-27
Maclaren: 1Sa 9:15-27 - --1 Samuel 9:15-27
Both the time and the place of the incidents here told are unknown. No note is given of the interval that had elapsed since the elder...
MHCC -> 1Sa 9:18-27
MHCC: 1Sa 9:18-27 - --Samuel, that good prophet, was so far from envying Saul, or bearing him any ill-will, that he was the first and most forward to do him honour. Both th...
Matthew Henry -> 1Sa 9:18-27
Matthew Henry: 1Sa 9:18-27 - -- Providence having at length brought Samuel and Saul together, we have here an account of what passed between them in the gate, at the feast, and in ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> 1Sa 9:18-24
Keil-Delitzsch: 1Sa 9:18-24 - --
The thread of the narrative, which was broken off in 1Sa 9:15, is resumed in 1Sa 9:18. Saul drew near to Samuel in the gate, and asked him for the s...
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 9:1--10:17 - --2. The anointing of Saul 9:1-10:16
In chapters 9-11 the writer painted Saul as the ideal man to ...
