Read today’s scripture.
Did anything in these chapters bother you, cause you to question, or give you closure?
1 Samuel 28.
Remember how we ended yesterday? The Philistine King Achish said, “David shall always be my servant.” Well God has other plans for David, and here’s how He brings them about.
David had been going out and fighting Israel’s enemies while letting Achish think he was fighting against Israel. So when the big push against Israel came, the king signed up David as his bodyguard and his 600 men as part of the Philistine army.
(Pause here while we see what is happening in Israel’s King Saul’s camp.)
Saul gathered all of Israel at Gilboa (his hometown) to fight the Philistines. But when he SAW their army, he was afraid. His heart trembled greatly. (No David to fight for him this time. In fact, if he’d looked, he might have seen David in the hoard. Don’t worry, God’s going to take care of that.)
Saul tries to “inquire of the LORD,” but the LORD does not answer him, either by a dream, or by the Urim, or by prophets. (Remember Samuel died.) Who else was there? Who could tell him GOD’s will? Oh! A witch! A necromancer who could bring up the dead! NOT!!!
(Read what God says about witches, necromancers, mediums, charmers, sorcerers, fortune tellers, diviners, or omen interpreters in Deut. 18:10-11, Lev. 19:31 and 20:27, Exodus 22:18) “Don’t go to them! Remove them from Israel! Kill them all!”)
It’s pretty clear that this is a huge no-no, but Saul is at his disobedient end. He has nowhere to turn except repentance to God, and he does not choose that option. “Seek out for me a woman who is a medium that I may inquire of her.”
It’s interesting, his servants know right where one is, in En-dor. (Even this witch knows that Saul had “cut off the mediums and necromancers from the land.” Obviously, he’d missed one.)
Saul disguises himself, goes to her, and tells her to bring up the spirit of someone he tells her. She’s no dummy and is reluctant, but Saul swears “by the LORD” not to punish her. Oh boy!!!
“Bring up Samuel.” And the witch is terrified when Samuel actually appears. She’s used to her demons impersonating people. She screams and accuses Saul. But the hapless king reassures her.
SAMUEL: Why have you disturbed me by bringing me up?
SAUL: I am in great distress for the Philistines are warring against me and God has turned away from me and answers me no more, either by prophets or dreams. TELL ME WHAT I SHALL DO!
SAMUEL: Why do you ask ME since the LORD has turned from you and become your enemy? The LORD has torn the kingdom out of your hand and given it to David…BECAUSE YOU DID NOT OBEY HIM and carry out his wrath against Amalek. The LORD will give Israel to the Philistines tomorrow. You and your sons will “soon be with ME.”
Not what Saul wanted to hear! He collapses.
1 Samuel 29.
Meanwhile, in the Philistines’ camp, the commanders object to “those Hebrews” being among them.
King Achish said “Is this not David, the servant of Saul, king of Israel who has been with me these years since he deserted. I have found no fault in him.”
But the commanders insisted the king send them back from the battle “lest he become an adversary to us. Is this not David of whom they sing and dance, “David has struck his ten thousands (of us!)”
(This is how God was protecting David from having to fight his own people.)
Achish relented, apologized to David, and sent him back, so as not to displease his commanders. “Arise before dawn and depart as soon as you have light.”
So David did. (Thank You, LORD!)
1 Samuel 30.
When David and his men returned to their home in Ziklag, they discovered the town burned and all their goods and families taken away. (No one had be killed – see the hand of the LORD!) But his men were so distraught that they spoke of stoning David!!!
David “strengthened himself in the LORD his God.” Then he asked Abiathar the priest, the son of Ahimelech (remember, he was the only one to escape when Saul had Doeg kill all the priests for helping David), “Bring the ephod and inquire of the LORD. Shall I pursue this band? Shall I overtake them?”
The LORD answered, Yes. So they set out, David and the 600. At Besor, 200 of the men were left behind “with the baggage” because they were too exhausted to go on. And (wow!) they found an Egyptian man in the open country, dying of hunger and thirst. It seems he was a slave to one of the Amalekites, who’d left him behind to die. When David promised not to desert him, he said he would lead them to the Amalekite camp.
He did. They were spread out in the valley, eating and drinking and dancing.
David struck them down from twilight until the evening of the next day. Not a man escaped, except a few who got on camels and rode off. All the loot (and people) they had taken from David was there, including his two wives, Abigail and Ahinoam.
So the 400 and David took it all back, plus loot from the Amalekites. David told the 400 to share the loot with the 200 who’d stayed behind, but they were reluctant to at first. David insisted, saying that all who fought AND all who protected the baggage would share alike. (It actually became a statute for Israel from that day on.)
When they got back to Ziklag (I assumed they rebuilt it), David sent presents of the spoil to the elders of Judah for all the places he and his men had looted while in the service of the Philistines (more than 13). WOW.
1 Samuel 31.
Meanwhile, north of Ziklag, the Philistines fought Israel. The men of Israel fell slain on Mount Gilboa. They overtook Saul and his sons, Jonathan, Abinadab, and Malchishu, and killed them. They pressed hard against Saul and he was seriously wounded by Philistine archers.
Saul pled with his armor-bearer to kill him, so the Philistines would not “mistreat him.” But the man refused to kill the king. Saul committed suicide. Then the armor-bearer did likewise.
“Thus Saul died, and his three sons, and his armor-bearer, and all his men, on the same day.” just as God had said through Samuel. (God never let any of Samuel’s words fall to the ground, even after his death!)
When the men on the other side of the valley saw their leader dead, they abandoned their cities and ran away. The Philistines came and lived in them.
The next day the Philistines found the body of Saul, cut off his head, and put it and his armor in the house of their idols, then hung his body on the wall.
(Can you imagine if David had been there??? Praise God, He had removed him from SEEING Saul and Jonathan dead and mistreated.)
Later the people of Jabesh-Gilead, whom Saul had helped at the beginning of his reign, came by night, took the bodies of Saul and his sons from the wall, and burned them. They took their bones and buried them under the tamarisk tree in Jabesh, and fasted seven days.
And so ignominiously ends the rule of Israel’s first king, and his line.
Why? Because he had twice disobeyed God’s specific word through Samuel, and then continuously refused to repent. (We will see David grievously sin against God too, but he repents. He suffers the consequences, but always turns back to his God.)
- O LORD, let Saul’s life be a warning to us, and to me. When I sin, even grievously, cause me to remember to turn to you, confess, repent, then walk in obedience.
Psalm 18.
- David: “I love You, O LORD, my strength. The LORD is my rock and my fortress and my deliverer, my God, my rock, in whom I take refuge, my shield, and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold!
- I call upon the LORD, who is worthy to be praised, and I am saved from my enemies.
- In my distress I called upon the LORD; to my God, I cried for help. From His temple, He heard my voice, and my cry to him reached His ears.
- He rescued me from my strong enemy and from those who hated me; for they were too mighty for me.
- For it is You who light my lamp; the LORD my God lightens my darkness. For by You, I can run against a troop, and by my God, I can leap over a wall.
- This God, His way is perfect, the word of the LORD proves true; He is a shield for all those who take refuge in Him.
- The LORD lives, and blessed by my rock, and exalted be the God of my salvation.
- For this I will praise you O LORD, among the nations, and sing to Your Name. Great salvation He brings to His king, and shows steadfast love to his anointed, to David and his offspring forever.

Saul’s fall is tragic. David’s trust is powerful. Repentance makes all the difference.
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