Difference between revisions of "Saul" - New World Encyclopedia

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'''Saul''' (שאול המלך) (or '''Sha'ul''') ('''שָׁאוּל''' ''asked for'', i.e. ''borrowed'', [[Standard Hebrew]] '''Šaʾul''', [[Tiberian Hebrew]] '''Šāʾûl''') is a figure identified in the [[Books of Samuel]] as having been the first king of the ancient [[Kingdom of Israel]].
 
[[Image:Julius Kronberg David och Saul 1885.jpg|thumb|right|''David and Saul'' (1885) by [[Julius Kronberg]].]]
 
Described in the Bible as a king of uncommon promise and valor, Saul united the tribes of Israel against the power of the Philistines, but soon lost the support of a key ally — namely Samuel the powerful prophet and judge who had intitially identified anointed him as God's chosen leader.
 
  
==Nativity==
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[[Image:Samuel-Blesses-Saul.jpg|thumb|275px|[[Samuel]] blesses '''Saul''' to be Israel's first king]]
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'''Saul''' (or '''Sha'ul''') (Hebrew: '''שָׁאוּל''', meaning "given" or "lent") was the first king of the ancient [[Kingdom of Israel]] who reigned from about 1020–1000 B.C.E.
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Described in the [[Bible]] as a man of uncommon promise and valor, Saul united the tribes of Israel against the power of the Philistines, but lost the support of a key ally—[[Samuel]], the powerful [[Prophet|prophet]] and judge who had initially identified and anointed him as God's chosen leader. Despite subsequent military successes and a promising heir in his son Jonathan, Saul became a tragic figure. He was plagued by what the Bible describes as "an evil spirit from the Lord," and what psychologists would recognize as classic symptoms of manic-depression.
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Much of the later part of Saul's reign was consumed by fighting against Israel's enemies on one hand and seeking to destroy his divinely-appointed successor, [[David]], on the other. He died in battle soon after the death of his son Jonathan, leaving his lesser sons as heirs. Within a few decades, his rival, David, had brought Saul's former kingdom under his sway and taken his only surviving heir into captivity.
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It should be noted that the story of Saul is largely written and edited by biblical writers who favored the southern, or Davidic, [[Kingdom of Judah]]. Our picture of Saul is therefore not an objective one. If his own supporters had written histories of his reign which survived intact, we would no doubt have a very different portrait of him.
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==Nativity and Youth==
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According to the Books of Samuel, Saul was the son of a man named Kish, and a member of the tribe of Benjamin. We are told little about Saul's youth other than that he was "an impressive young man without equal among the Israelites—a head taller than any of the others" (1 Sam. 9:2).
  
According to the Books of Samuel, when taken at face value, Saul was the son of a man named ''Kish'', and a member of the [[tribe of Benjamin]]. However, according to several [[biblical criticism|biblical scholars]], the Books of Samuel originally stated that Saul was the son of [[Hannah]] and [[Elkanah]]. According to the Books of Samuel as they now stand, Hannah, who had been childless, had ''asked'' God for a son, and when she later became pregnant named the son ''[[Samuel]]'' to reflect this; meaning this pasage now refers to a different person, the last of the Hebrew Judges, rather than the person who would become king.
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However, biblical scholars suggest that some of the details in the story of Saul's childhood may actually be found in the infancy narrative now attributed to Samuel. Evidence for this is found in the meaning of Saul's name and in that the story of Samuel's infancy seems, in some respects, to describe that of a future king rather than a prophet.  
  
Many scholars of Hebrew, however, find ''Samuel'' (literally ''name of God'') an odd name to be explained by this etymology; the traditional translation ''heard of God'' (i.e. ''God heard'') requires a linguistically awkward rendering, as ''heard of God'' is actually ''Shamael''; ''Saul'', on the other hand, would have fit the explanation near-perfectly, since the Hebrew term used for ''asked'' is ''sha'ul'' (in a similar way to ''there was a young lady from Bude, who went for a swim in the ...'' ending with ''lake'' would be less plausible than it ending with ''nude'').
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The Hebrew version of Saul's name can mean, "lent," "asked for," or "given," and Samuel's mother Hanna seems to be making a pun on this word when she says to Eli the priest:
  
Many Biblical scholars therefore think that the text originally spoke of Saul as being the child of Hannah that she dedicated to God, and brought up in God's [[tabernacle]]; scholars think that a later scribe ''censored'' the narrative (by swapping Saul's name for Samuel's) due to the religious sensibilities that would have been offended by the latterly negative figure of Saul having been divinely appointed and raised. The [[Song of Hannah]], a poem interrupting the prose text at this point, supposedly being Hannah's response to the birth of her son, is according to textual scholars more realistically a song of praise directed towards a monarch, and hence more likely to have been inserted into a narrative about the birth of a future king (Saul) than of a prophet (Samuel).
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<blockquote>The Lord has granted me what I asked [''sha'al''] of him. So now I give [''sha'al''] him to the Lord. For his whole life he will be given over [''sha'al''] to the Lord" (1 Sam: 27-28).</blockquote>
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Moreover, the ''Song of Hannah,'' a psalm of praise expressing Hannah's response to the birth of her son, can more easily be interpreted as referring to her son as a monarch than a prophet or judge: "He [God] will give strength to his king and exalt the horn of his anointed" (1 Sam. 2:10).
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Whether or not the biblical story of Samuel's childhood originally described that of Saul, the rabbinical tradition and the Bible itself are unanimous in portraying the young Saul as a boy of great promise. The Jewish Encyclopedia, summarizing the Talmudic praise of Saul, says:
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<blockquote>He was extraordinarily upright as well as perfectly just. Nor was there any one more pious than he; for when he ascended the throne he was as pure as a child, and had never committed sin. He was marvelously handsome; and the maidens who told him concerning Samuel talked so long with him that they might observe his beauty the more.<ref> Jewish Encyclopedia.com. [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=275&letter=S&search=saul#1 Saul.] Retrieved July 16, 2007. </ref></blockquote>
  
 
==Appointment as King==
 
==Appointment as King==
  
The Books of Samuel give three distinct accounts of how Saul came to be appointed as king:
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The Bible gives a threefold account of how Saul came to be appointed king. First, he is privately chosen by the [[Prophet]] [[Samuel]] and anointed as king. Second, he is re-anointed in public after God confirmed the choice by lottery. Finally, he is confirmed by popular acclaim after uniting the tribes of Israel in victorious battle. Modern biblical scholars, on the other hand, tend to view the accounts as distinct, representing at least two and possibly three separate traditions which were later woven into a single account.
* (1 Samuel 9:1-10:16) Saul was sent with a servant to look for his father's she-asses, who had strayed; leaving his home at [[Gibeah]], the eventually wander to the district of [[Zuph]], at which point Saul suggests abandoning their search. Saul's servant however, remarks that they happened to be near the town of [[Ramah (ancient Israel)|Ramah]], where a famous ''seer'' was located, and suggested that they should consult him first.  The ''seer'' (later identified by the text as [[Samuel]]), having previously had a ''vision'' instructing him to do so, offers hospitality to Saul when he enters Ramah, and later [[anointing|anoints]] him in private.
 
* (1 Samuel 10:17-24 and 12:1-5) Desiring to be like other nations, there was a popular movement to establish a centralised monarchy. Samuel therefore assembled the people at [[Mizpah]], and despite having strong reservations, which he made no attempt to hide, allows the appointment of a king. Samuel uses [[cleromancy]] to determine who it was that God desired to be the king, whittling the assembly down into ever smaller groups until Saul is finally identified. Saul, hiding in baggage, is then publicly anointed.
 
* (1 Samuel 11:1-11 and 11:15) The [[Ammon]]ites, lead by [[Nahash]], lay siege to [[Jabesh-Gilead]], who are forced to surrender. Under the terms of surrender, the occupants of the city would be forced into slavery, and have their right eyes removed as a sign of this. The city's occupants send out word of this to the other [[tribes of Israel]], and the tribes west of the Jordan assemble an army under the leadership of Saul. Saul leads the army to victory against the Ammonites, and, in both gratitude and appreciation of military skill, the people congregate at [[Gilgal]], and acclaim Saul as king.
 
  
According to a most scholars of [[textual criticism]], the existence of three different explanations here is the result of the biblical narrative being spliced together from a number of originally distinct source texts. This is clearer in the [[Septuagint]] version of 1 Samuel 11:15, which describes Saul being publicly anointed as king by Samuel at Gilgal, rather than the crowd simply acclaiming him as such; i.e. Saul gets anointed three times, and twice publicly. Textual scholars consider the cleromancy narrative to be part of the so-called ''republican source'' (which takes an anti-monarchial spin), while the battle-victory narrative, and sometimes also the lost-sheep narrative, is assigned to the ''pro-monarchial source'' (which views the Israelite monarchy through rose-tinted glasses). The ''pro-monarchial source'' is generally thought to be the older, reflecting court records from the times of strong kings, while the ''republican source'' is considered to have a date more in tune with the times when writers, such as [[Jeremiah]], were willing to openly criticise their weaker rulers.
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* (1 Samuel 9:1-10:16): Saul travels with a servant to look for his father's she-asses, who have strayed. Leaving his home at Gibeah, they eventually wander to the district of Zuph, at which point Saul suggests abandoning their search. Saul's servant however, suggests that they should consult the local "seer" first. The seer (later identified as Samuel) offers hospitality to Saul when he nears the high place at Ramah, and later anoints him in private.
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* (1 Samuel 10:17-24 and 12:1-5): Seeing that Samuel's sons were corrupt, the Israelites demand a king to rule and protect them. Samuel therefore assembles the people at Mizpah and, despite having strong reservations, obeys God's instruction to appoint a king. In this version, a lottery system is used to determine the choice. First the tribe of Benjamin is chosen, and then Saul. The seemingly unsuspecting Saul seeks to avoid his fate by hiding in the baggage. He is soon discovered, anointed, and publicly proclaimed. The text notes, however, that certain "troublemakers" grumble against the choice.
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* (1 Samuel 11:1-11 and 11:15): In this story, Saul is living as a private landholder. He rises to the kingship by uniting the several tribes to relieve the people of Jabesh Gilead, who are being besieged by the Ammonites. After Saul gains victory, the people congregate at Gilgal, and acclaim Saul as king. (This account is portrayed in the text as a confirmation of Saul's already known kingship, but some scholars take the view that it describes a separate tradition about the origin of Saul's monarchy, which a later editor has characterized as a confirmation.)
  
==Michmash==
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In any case, the tribe of Benjamin was an unlikely choice for a king. Saul's own declaration "Am not I a Benjamite, of the smallest of the tribes of Israel?" betrays not only his own lack of confidence but also the fact that Benjamin was, by this time, a weak and despised part of the Israelite confederacy (1 Sam. 9:21). Indeed, the final chapter of the [[Book of Judges]] speaks of the Israelites swearing that "Not one of us will give his daughter in marriage to a Benjamite" (Judges 21:1). Although this oath was later rescinded, there can be little doubt that the choice of a Benjamite as king would be problematic to many among the other tribes.
  
The [[Philistines]] had placed a garrison at [[Geba]], in order to suppress the Israelites. After Saul was appointed king, according to Samuel, he amassed an army to throw off the Philistine yoke, and entered into battle against the Philistines at [[Michmash]]. Saul's army was small, numbering around 600 men, a reasonable army for a small kingdom. The text portrays the Philistine army as vastly outnumbering this, with 30,000 chariots for example, but the numbers are unrealistic - the entire Roman Empire only had about 150,000 men, so a small group such as the Philistines couldn't be expected to fit anything near this number into their small territory. Also considered unrealistic by historians is the suggestion by the text that Saul and Jonathan were the only men apart from the Philistines that had weapons; textual critics also believe that this suggestion (1 Samuel 13:19-22) is a later addition to the text, particularly as the narrative flows more naturally from the end of verse 18 onto the start of verse 23.
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==Saul's Victories==
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The text also states that during the early part of the battle the [[Hebrews]], who the text treats as a distinct group separate from the Israelites, had sided with the Philistines (1 Samuel 14:21) and thus been enemies of the Israelites; a few modern translations insist that only ''some of the Hebrews'' did this, but both the [[masoretic text]] and [[Septuagint]] refer to the Hebrews as a whole. The text states that a man named [[Jonathan]] lead the Hebrews, and that he was the son of Saul. Scholars of biblical criticism, however, have proposed that this is simply an ethnology - indicating that the Hebrews were a branch of Israelites (and distinct from the others), rather than that they were lead by a son of the Israelite King.  
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On the foundation of his fame in winning a victory over the Ammonites, Saul amassed an army to throw off the Philistine yoke. Just before this battle, however, he had a serious falling out with Samuel. Samuel had instructed Saul to wait seven days for him at Gilgal. Saul did so, but as the hour of Samuel’s coming approached, Saul’s men begin to desert. When the appointed time came and went without Samuel appeance, Saul prepared for battle by offering sacrifice to God. Samuel soon arrived on the scene and condemned Saul, apparently for usurping the priestly role. Samuel withdrew his support for Saul and declared that God has chosen another to replace him. Deprived of Samuel's blessing, Saul's army became small, numbering only around six hundred men. The text portrayed the Philistine army as vastly outnumbering the Israelites and also as having superior weaponry due to their mastery of the art of metalworking, while the Israelites use mostly flint and wood weapons.
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[[Image:Saul-Map.JPG|thumb|250px|Map showing several locations related to Saul's life.]]
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Jonathan and a small group of courageous Israelites cleverly snuck into a Philistine outpost without Saul's knowledge to attack them from within, causing panic. However, trouble was brewing for the Israelites spiritually. Saul has vowed that his men would not eat until the battle was over, and Jonathan—who has not heard the vow—consumed wild honey. Nevertheless, the battle went well. When the Israelites noticed the chaos in the Philistine camp, Saul joined in the attack and the Philistines were driven out. However, some of his soldiers sinned by eating plundered meat that had not been properly slaughtered.
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Saul asked his priest, Ahijah, to use divination to ask God whether he should pursue the Philistines and slaughter them, but God gave no answer. Convinced that God's silence was due to someone's sin, Saul conducted a lottery and discovered Jonathan's sin of eating forbidden honey. Saul determined to slay Jonathan for his offense, but the soldiers came to Jonathan's defense. Saul relented, and he also cut off his pursuit of the Philistines.
  
The text explains that Jonathan and a small group of Hebrews left the Israelites and sneaked into the Philistine camp to attack them from within, without the Israelites noticing the absence; many scholars of biblical criticism regard this as simply being an editorial excuse to justify the Hebrews' initial presence among the Philistine army. It would appear that the Hebrews betrayed the Philistines and changed sides, the text adding that Jonathan had started attacking the Philistines from within their own camp, causing panic. When the Israelites noticed the chaos, Saul consulted the [[Ephod]] for advice, and then decided that the Israelites should join in the attack on the Philistines.
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Despite the lack of a decisive conclusion to the war against the Philistines, the Bible states that Saul was an effective military leader:
  
In the text, having pushed back the Philistines, Saul makes a vow that no Israelite would eat until the battle is over, in order to ensure divine support for a victory. Jonathan, who has not heard the vow, consumes [[honey]] from a [[honeycomb]] that he found on the ground. Although one of the soldiers tells Jonathan about Saul's vow, Jonathan remarks that Saul's vow was militarily unwise since lack of food physically weakened the army. When the battle was over, the Israelites, being famished, killed the livestock they had taken from the Philistines, and ate the meat on the spot, without first draining the blood (an offense to the religious sensibilities of the Israelites, who considered that blood should never be consumed).
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<blockquote>After Saul had assumed rule over Israel, he fought against their enemies on every side: Moab, the Ammonites, Edom, the kings of Zobah, and the Philistines. Wherever he turned, he inflicted punishment on them.</blockquote>
  
The people wanted to continue to pursue the Philistines by night, and commit [[genocide]], but the priest said they should consult God for advice. According to the text, God was silent, and Saul, deciding that someone must therefore have sinned, used [[cleromancy]] to find the guilty party, Jonathan. Saul decides that Jonathan should die for his violation of Saul's rash vow, but the commanders of the Israelite army prevent Saul from doing this, as Jonathan had in their view brought them victory over the Philistines. According to biblical critics, this narrative concerning Saul's vow originates with an underlying tension between the Hebrews (represented by Jonathan) and the Israelites, with the Hebrews being seen, to an extent, as heroes by the general population, but a thorn in the side by rulers such as Saul.
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He was assisted in these efforts by his war captain, Abner, as well as by David and Jonathan. The record says little about his administrative efforts or the details of the Israelite tribal alliances. Later it was learned that the tribe of Judah supported David in opposition to Saul and his progeny, whose support seemed to come more from the northern tribes, but few details are given.
  
 
==Rejection==
 
==Rejection==
  
According to the text as it stands, Samuel had told Saul to wait for him for seven days before attacking, but as Samuel did not arrive within the time and the Israelites became restless, Saul started preparing for battle by offering sacrifices; when Samuel does finally arrive he criticises Saul for not waiting and curses him to fall from God's favour.  
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Samuel appeared again and gave Saul another chance. He was told to make [[holy war]] against the people known as the Amalekites. To conduct a war acceptable to God, Saul was instructed to slay every last one of these people, including women and children, as well as livestock. However, he was also told that his troops must refrain from taking plunder of any kind.
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Saul carried out a widespread assault against the Amalekites, killing all of them except their king, Agag. His troops, moreover, kept some of the best cattle alive. Saul erected a victory monument at Mt. Carmel and returned to Gilgal. Samuel, however, did not share his sense of joy. He angrily accused the king of disobedience. The bewildered Saul protested, saying:
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<blockquote>I did obey the Lord. I went on the mission the Lord assigned me. I completely destroyed the Amalekites and brought back Agag their king. The soldiers took sheep and cattle from the plunder, the best of what was devoted to God, in order to sacrifice them to the Lord your God at Gilgal.</blockquote>
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Samuel rejected this explanation. Saul then admitted his sin and begged for forgiveness, pleading for Samuel to return with him "so that I might worship God." Samuel, however, declared that God had rejected Saul as king. He turned away, and Saul desperately grabbed his garment, which ripped. Samuel interpreted this as a prophetic act, confirming that God had torn the kingdom from Saul. Samuel made one concession and allowed Saul to worship God with him. He then commanded that Agag be brought forth. He promptly "hew[ed] Agag in pieces" and left the scene, never to see Saul again in this life (1 Sam. 15:35).
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==Saul and David==
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===First encounter (two versions)===
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[[Image:Julius Kronberg David och Saul 1885.jpg|thumb|left|225px|''David and Saul'' (1885) by J. Kronberg.]]
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As David arrived on the scene, Saul was cast firmly in the role of antagonist. He became the dark central figure in a tragedy of Shakespearian proportions.
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The text tells us that God's spirit had left Saul, and an "evil spirit from God" had obsessed him (1 Sam. 16:14). Saul requested soothing music, and a servant recommended David, the son of Jesse, who was renowned as a skillful harpist and warrior. David was appointed as Saul's armor bearer, playing the harp as needed to calm Saul's moods. It is mentioned later that Samuel had previously gone to Bethlehem and secretly anointed the young David to be Israel's king.
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The story of David and Goliath intervenes at this point, clearly from a different source than the story above. In this story, the Philistines returned with an army to attack Israel, and Jesse sent David not as harpist to the king, but simply to carry food to his older brothers who were serving in the army (1 Samuel 17:1-18:5). David learned that the giant Goliath had challenged Israel to send its champion to fight him. David volunteered for the task. Saul, who in this story had not met David previously, appointed the lad as his champion. David defeated Goliath and became the king's favorite. Jonathan, a kindred spirit to David, made a pact with him, giving him his own clothing and weapons. Saul dispatched David on various military errands, and he won renown. The story took an ominous turn, however, as the Israelite women took up the chant: "Saul has slain his thousands and David his tens of thousands." Saul then began to see David as a possible threat to the throne.
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===Saul Turns against David===
  
After the battle with the Philistines was over, the text describes Samuel as having instructed Saul to commit total [[genocide]] against the [[Amalekite]]s, in accordance with the [[613 mitzvot|mitzvah]] to do so. Having forewarned the [[Kenite]]s living among the Amalekites to leave, Saul went to war and won against the Amalekites, but ''only'' killed all the babies, women, children, poor quality livestock, and men, leaving alive the king and best livestock.
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The text gives us an insight into Saul's spiritual character at this point, as it describes him as "prophesying in his house" (1 Sam 18:10). Earlier it described him as engaging in ecstatic prophesy with the bands of roving prophet-musicians associated with Samuel (1 Sam. 10:5). One might picture David and Saul engaging in this type of intense spiritual-musical activity together, rather than David softly strumming while a depressed Saul lies next to him. This other-worldly tendency in Saul also apparently made him vulnerable to spiritual obsession. Thus, while Saul was prophesying, the evil spirit from God "came forcefully upon him" and inspired him to attempt to murder David. David twice eluded the king's attacks, and Saul then sent David away, fearing the lord's presence with him.
  
When Samuel finds out that Saul has ''only'' committed near-total genocide, he becomes angry and launches into a long and bitter [[diatribe]] about how God regretted making Saul king, since Saul is disobedient. When Samuel turns away, Saul grabs Samuel by his clothes tearing a small part of them off, which Samuel states is a prophecy about what would happen to Saul's kingdom. Samuel then commands that the Amalekite king (who, like all other Amalekite kings in the Hebrew Bible, is named [[Agag]]) should be brought forth, and when he is, Samuel kills him himself. Samuel then leaves, forever.
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Ever caught in what modern readers would recognize as the throes of bi-polarism, Saul then decided to give David the hand of his daughter. First he offered David his eldest, Merab, and then Michal, the younger, who had fallen in love with David. David stated that he was too poor to marry a king's daughter, but Saul insisted, telling David that the bride-price would only be one hundred foreskins from the Philistines. The narrator informs us that Saul actually hoped that the Philistines would prevail over David, but the champion returned with twice the required number. Having tendered this gory gift, David was married to Michal. Until this point, the text states that David continued to act as one of Saul's war captains, proving especially effective in several campaigns against the Philistines. The focus of the narrative, however, is to provide the details of several further plots by Saul against David.  
  
According to textual critics, both the earlier passage about Saul's impatience (1 Samuel 13:7b-15a) and the later narrative of the Amelekite war (1 Samuel 15) are later redactions of the text that belong together. These are both designed to justify the later fate of Saul and division in his kingdom, when Saul had seemingly been divinely chosen to be king, and simultaneously portray ancient Israel as more of a [[theocracy]] than it would otherwise have appeared to be, making a king appear to take orders from a prophet.
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Jonathan dissuaded Saul from a plan to kill David and informed David of the plot. David (quite foolishly if the order of the story is correct) once again played the harp for Saul, and Saul again tried to murder him. Saul then tried to have David killed during the night, but Michal helped him escape and tricked his pursuers by disguising a household idol to look like David in bed. David fled to Samuel.
  
==David's introduction==
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Saul pursued David, but whatever evil influence controlled him was no match for the spiritual power of Samuel. The text here contradicts its earlier declaration that Samuel and Saul never met again:
  
It is at this point that [[David]], a son of [[Jesse]], from the [[tribe of Judah]], enters the story. According to the narrative, David comes to prominence on three occasions:
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<blockquote>The Spirit of God came even upon him, and he walked along prophesying until he came to Naioth. He stripped off his robes and also prophesied in Samuel's presence. He lay that way all that day and night (1 Sam. 19:23-24).</blockquote>
* (1 Samuel 16:1-13) Samuel is surruptitiously sent by God to Jesse. Pretending to simply be offering a sacrifice in the vicinity, Samuel includes Jesse among the invited guests. Dining together, Jesse's sons are brought one by one to Samuel, each time being rejected by him; running out of sons, Jesse sends for David, the youngest, who was tending sheep. When brought to Samuel, David is anointed by him in front of his other brothers.
 
* (1 Samuel 16:14-23) Saul is troubled by an evil spirit sent by God (some translations euphemistically just describe God not preventing an evil spirit from troubling Saul). Saul requests soothing music, and a servant recommends David the son of Jesse, who is renowned as a skillful harpist and soldier. When word of Saul's needs reach Jesse, he sends David, who had been looking after a flock, and David is appointed as Saul's armour bearer. David remains at court playing the harp as needed by Saul to calm his moods.
 
* (1 Samuel 17:1-18:5) The Philistines return with an army to attack Israel, but, having amassed on a hillside opposite to the Israelite forces, suggest that to save effort and lives on both sides, it would be better to have a [[proxy war|proxy combat]] between their champion, a [[Rephaim]] from [[Gath (city)|Gath]] named [[Goliath]], and someone of Saul's choosing. David, a young shepherd boy, happens to be delivering food to his three eldest brothers, who are in the Israelite army, at the time that the challenge is made. David, who is somewhat cocksure, talks to the nearby soldiers mocking the Philistines, but is told off by his brothers for doing so. David's speech is overheard and reported to Saul, who does not know David, but summons David, and on hearing David's views decides to kit him out with his (Saul's) own armour. Saul then appoints David as his champion, and David defeats Goliath with a mere shot from a [[Sling (weapon)|sling]].
 
  
Textual scholars see these three narratives as coming from three distinct sources, the first, in which David is anointed, being a late redaction into the text so as to portray David as having been divinely appointed, and to insert a prophet into the role of [[kingmaker]], to be more suggestive of theocracy. The second narrative, which mocks Saul as being afflicted by an evil spirit, is thought to come from the ''republican source''.  
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Leaving Samuel's protection, David went to Jonathan, who agreed to act as David's intelligence agent in Saul's house. Saul saw through this and castigated Jonathan for disloyalty. It became clear that Saul wanted David dead. Jonathan told David of Saul's intent, and David again fled. Saul later caused Michal to marry another man in place of David.
  
The third narrative, which is the most famous, is thought to come from the ''monarchial source''. It sits uneasily with the second; David, a renowned warrior who has just been appointed in court as Saul's armour bearer (narrative 2), is very shortly afterwards an unknown unarmoured young shepherd boy delivering food to his brothers (narrative 3). An attempt to smooth over elements of these ''difficulties'' of the [[masoretic text]] appears to have been made by the [[Septuagint]], which excludes the passages referring to David delivering food to his brothers, and Saul not having known him (specifically 17:12-31, 17:41, 17:50, 17:55-18:5) - these passages are marked with brackets in some translations.
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===Saul Pursues David===
  
The third narrative also sits uneasily with 2 Samuel 21:19, which says that [[Elhanen]], a soldier working for David, slayed Goliath (a few translations smooth over this by claiming that Elhanen slayed a ''brother'' of Goliath). Scholars of biblical criticism generally consider the older tradition to be the one in which Elhanen slayed Goliath, the tradition in which it was David, and in which it was the reason for defeat of the entire Philistine army, coming into existence to make David appear even more skilled/historically important than he actually was in reality. The use of a slingshot to cause Goliath's death is not as remarkable as it at first seems; many soldiers in the ancient near east were equipped with slings as their main weapon, for example there are several [[Assyria]]n carvings of their use, though by the 7th century B.C.E. (around which time the biblical text is thought to date by critical scholars) better weapon technology would have been available.
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Saul now treated David as both a rival and a fugitive traitor. An Edomite named Doeg told Saul that David had been hiding in a place named Nob, and that the priest there, Ahimelech, had helped David by giving material aid and consulting God for him. Saul summoned Ahimelech and castigated him for his assistance to David, then ordered henchmen to kill Ahimelech and the other priests of Nob. None of Saul's henchmen were willing to do this, so Doeg offered to do it instead, and he killed 85 priests. Doeg also slaughtered every man, woman, and child still in Nob except Ahimilech's son Abiathar, who made good his escape and informed David of events.  
  
==Saul's enmity with David==
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David amassed about four hundred disaffected men together as a group of outlaws. With these men, David attacked the Philistines at Keilah and evicted them from the city. Hearing the news, Saul led his army there, intending to besiege the city. David learned of Saul's plan and, through divination, discovered that the citizens of Keilah would betray him to Saul. He fled to Ziph, where Saul again pursued him. The Bible retains two versions of the humorous story of Saul and David at Ziph, both involving David as a clever trickster who is in a position to slay Saul, but refrains due to his belief that to slay "the Lord's anointed" would be a sin.
[[Image:Saul Throws Spear at David by George Tinworth.png|300px|thumbnail|right|"Saul Throws Spear at David" by George Tinworth]]
 
  
In the text, after David is introduced at court, Jonathan becomes extremely ''fond'' of him, to the extent of ''loving him as himself'', and stripping naked (or nearly naked) in front of him (1 Samuel 18:4) to give his military clothes to David; some scholars think that the text here, and elsewhere, refers to [[David and Jonathan|them having had a homosexual relationship]]. After David returns from killing Goliath, the women heap praise upon him, and refer to him as a greater military hero than Saul, driving Saul to jealousy, fearing that David constituted a rival to the throne.  
+
Tiring of playing cat-and-mouse with Saul, David fled to the Philistine city of Gath, the birthplace of Goliath, where he offered himself as a mercenary general to King Achish, Israel's adversary. Seeing that his rival had gone over to the enemy and seemed no longer to seek the throne of Israel, Saul broke off his pursuit.
  
Another day, while David was playing the harp, Saul threw a spear at him, due to having been possessed by an evil spirit, but missed, on two occasions.  Saul resolved to get David out of the court, and appointed him an officer, but David became increasingly successful, making Saul resentful of him. Saul schemed to rid himself of the problem by offering David the hand of his daughter, [[Merob]], in return for being his champion, but David turned the offer down claiming he was too humble, and Merob was married to another man instead. Another daughter, [[Michal]], had fallen for David, so Saul repeated the offer in regard to her, but again David turned it down claiming he was too poor; Saul persuaded David that the [[bride price]] would only be 100 [[foreskin]]s from the Philistines, hoping that David would be killed trying to achieve this. David managed to obtain 200 foreskins, and was thus married to Michal.
+
==Battle of Mt. Gilboa==
  
The narrative continues with Saul making further plots against David, but Jonathan dissuades Saul from this course of action, and tells David what had occurred. Saul then seemingly tries to have David killed during the night, but Michal helps him escape and tricks his pursuers by using a household idol to make it look like David was still in bed. David flees to Jonathan, who seemingly wasn't living near Saul, and Jonathan agrees to return to Saul and find out his ultimate intent. When dining with Saul, Jonathan pretends that David has been called away to his brothers, but Saul sees through this and castigates Jonathan for being the ''companion'' of David, and it becomes clear that Saul wants David dead. The next day, Jonathan meets with David at a pre-arranged spot, and tells him Saul's intent, and the two friends say their goodbyes, David fleeing into the country. Saul later causes Michal to marry another man instead of David.  
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[[Image:Saul-Witch.jpg|thumb|250px|The medium of Endor contacts the spirit of Samuel, who predicts Saul's doom.]]
  
Saul is later informed by an [[Edom]]ite named [[Doeg the Edomite|Doeg]] that he had witnessed David hiding in a place named [[Nob]], and that the priest of Nob, [[Ahimelech]], had helped David with food, and by consulting God for him. Saul therefore summons Ahimelech, and criticises him for his assistance to David, then orders henchmen to kill Ahimelech, and the other priests of Nob. None of Saul's henchmen is willing to do this, so Doeg offers to do it instead, killing 85 priests, and Saul also kills every man, woman, and child living in Nob.
+
The Philistines now prepared to attack Israel, and Saul led out his army to face them at [[Gilboa]]. Seeking in vain for God's advice through prophets, dreams, and divination, Saul searched for a medium through whom he could consult with the departed soul of Samuel. In so doing, Saul broke his own law against such activity. At the village of Endor, he found a woman who agreed to conjure the spirit of the famous judge. Samuel's ghost only confirmed Saul's doom—that he would lose the battle, that Jonathan would be killed, and that Saul would soon join Samuel in [[Sheol]].  
  
David had left Nob by this point and had amassed about 400 disaffected men together a group of outlaws. With his men David launched an attack on the Philistines at [[Keilah]], and evicted them from the city, but when Saul heard about this, Saul lead his army there, so that he could trap David and his men inside the city and besiege it. David however heard about this, and having received divine council (via the [[Ephod]]) that the citizens of Keilah would betray him to Saul, decided to leave, and fled to [[Ziph]]. Saul finds out about this and pursues David there on two occasions:
+
Broken in spirit, Saul returned to the face the enemy, and the Israelites were soundly defeated. Three of Saul's sons—Jonathan, Abinadab, and Malki-Shua—were slain. Saul himself suffered a critical arrow wound. To escape the ignominy of capture, Saul asked his armor bearer to kill him, but commited suicide by falling on his sword when the armor bearer refused (1 Sam. 31 5).
*Some of the inhabitants of Ziph betray David's location to Saul, but David hears about it and flees with his men to [[Maon]]. Saul follows David, but while Saul travels along one side of the gorge, David travels along the other, and Saul is forced to break off pursuit when the Philistines invade. This is supposedly how the place became known as the ''gorge of divisions''. [[David]] hid in the caves at [[Engedi]], and after fighting the Philistines, Saul went to Engedi to attack him. Saul eventually enters the cave in which David had been hiding, but as David was in the darkest recesses Saul doesn't spot him. David swipes at Saul and cuts off part of his garment, but restrains himself and his associates from going further due to a [[taboo]] against killing an anointed king. David then leaves the cave, revealing himself to Saul, and gives a speech that persuades Saul to reconcile with David, and the two make an oath not to harm one another.
 
*Shortly afterwards some of the inhabitants of Ziph betray David's location to Saul, and so Saul goes to Ziph with his men. When David hears of this he sneaks into Saul's camp by night, and thrusts his spear into the ground near where Saul was sleeping. David prevents his associates from killing Saul due to a taboo against killing an anointed king, and merely steals Saul's spear and water jug. The next day, David stands at the top of an oppositing slope to Saul's camp, and shouts out that he had been in Saul's camp the previous night (using the spear and jug as proof). David then gives a speech that persuades Saul to reconcile with David, and the two make an oath not to harm one another.
 
  
According to textual scholars, this narrative is the result of the splicing together of two earlier narratives - the ''republican source'' and the ''monarchial source''; the ''republican source'' being responsible for the passages involving Jonathan, the first pursuit to Ziph and the first reconciliation; the ''monarchial source'' being responsible for the passages involving Michal, Nob, the second pursuit to Ziph and second reconciliation. Michal essentially plays the same role in the ''monarchial source'' as Jonathan does in the ''republican source'' - as David's protector in Saul's court.  
+
In an alternative version of the story, a young Amalekite presented Saul's crown to David—here the Amalekites had not been wiped out—and claimed to have finished off Saul at his request (2 Sam. 1). The bodies of Saul and his sons were publicly displayed by the Philistines on the wall of Beth-shan, while Saul’s armor was hung up in the temple of the goddess Ashtaroth/[[Astarte]]. However, loyal inhabitants of Jabesh Gilead, remembering Saul as their savior, rescued the bodies, where they were honorably burned and later buried (1 Sam. 21:21-13).
  
Both narratives are interesting to scholars of biblical criticism, who, for example, view the republican source as having incorporated a [[folk etymology]] for the ''gorge of divisions'' into the narrative. The ''monarchial source'' mentioning a ''household idol'' is of interest as it indicates that such things existed and were not regarded as inappropriate in early [[Yahweh]]-religion; archaeology confirms a large number of household idols existed in early Israel, particularly statues of [[Asherah]], Yahweh's wife (according to inscriptions on a number of surviving Asherah statues).
+
==Saul's Legacy==
  
David's relationship with Jonathan, and David's subsequent flight, is seen by some as being an [[eponym]]-type narrative, in which nations are treated as people - David representing the [[Kingdom of Judah]], and Jonathan representing the ''[[Hebrews]]'' (who the text of the books of Samuel appears to treat as distinct from Israel or Judah). David's 400 strong army thus would constitute the army of Judah (compare Saul's 600 strong army of Israel), while Jonathan's visits and association with David reflects an alliance between the Hebrews and Judah which became more important than the alliance between the Hebrews and Israel. In essence the narrative of David's flight and reconciliation with Saul becomes one of a rebellion by Judah, assisted by the Hebrews, that eventually became an uneasy truce.
+
Samuel preserved a hymn praising Saul, which is characterized as having been composed by David upon hearing of Saul's death. It reads, in part:
  
==Is Saul among the prophets?==
+
<blockquote>Your glory, O Israel, lies slain on your heights.
 +
<br/>How the mighty have fallen!
 +
<br/>Tell it not in Gath, proclaim it not in the streets of Ashkelon,
 +
<br/>Lest the daughters of the Philistines be glad,
 +
<br/>Lest the daughters of the uncircumcised rejoice.
  
The phrase ''is Saul among the prophets'', is mentioned by the text in a way that suggests it was a popular phrase or [[proverb]] in later Israelite culture, perhaps in a similar way to ''is the Pope a Catholic''. It is given an etymology on two separate occasions:
+
<br/>O mountains of Gilboa,  
* (1 Samuel 10:11 etc.) Having been anointed by Samuel, Saul is told of signs he will receive to know that he has been divinely appointed. The last of these signs is that Saul will be met by an ecstatic group of prophets leaving a ''high place'' and playing music on [[lyre]], [[tamborine]], and [[flute]]s. The signs come true (though the text skips the first two, suggesting that a portion of the text has been lost, or edited out for some reason), and Saul joins the ecstatic prophets, hence the phrase.
+
<br/>May you have neither dew nor rain,  
* (1 Samuel 19:24 etc.) Saul sends men to pursue David, but when the men meet a group of ecstatic prophets playing music on [[lyre]], [[tamborine]], and [[flute]], they become overcome with a ''prophetic state'' and join in. Saul sends more men, but they too join the prophets. Eventually Saul himself goes, and also joines the prophets, hence the phrase.
+
<br/>Nor fields that yield offerings of grain .  
 +
<br/>For there the shield of the mighty was defiled,  
 +
<br/>the shield of Saul—-no longer rubbed with oil.  
  
According to textual criticism, the reason for these two quite different explanations is that they come from two different sources - the first from the ''monarchial source'', which portrays the phrase as casting Saul in a positive light, while the second is considered to come from the ''republican source'', and suggests the phrase was a mockery of Saul. Which of these is the true origin of the phrase, or whether another explanation is the genuine one, is unknown.
+
<br/>From the blood of the slain,
 +
<br/>from the flesh of the mighty,  
 +
<br/>the bow of Jonathan did not turn back,  
 +
<br/>the sword of Saul did not return unsatisfied (2 Sam. 1:20-22).</blockquote>
  
==Battle of Gilboa==
+
Sources are rather confused regarding Saul's descendants. According to 1 Samuel, Saul had three sons, Jonathan, Ishvi and Malki-Shua, and two daughters, Merab and Michal. Saul's primary wife is named as Ahinoam, daughter of Ahimaaz. 1 Chronicales 8:33 says that Saul's sons were named Jonathan, Malki-Shua, Abinadab, and Esh-Baal (Man of Baal). 2 Samuel calls the latter son [[Ish-bosheth]] (Man of Shame). In addition, 2 Samuel 21:8 refers to "Armoni and Mephibosheth” as "the two sons of Aiah's daughter Rizpah, whom she had borne to Saul." Earlier references to Mephibosheth in 2 Samuel, however, speak of him as Jonathan's son, not Saul's.
[[Image:Bataille de Gelboé.jpg|thumb|right|The Battle of Gilboa, by [[Jean Fouquet]]]]
 
  
Despite the oath(s) of reconciliation, the biblical text states that David felt insecure, and so made an alliance with the Philistines, becoming their [[vassal]]. Emboldened by this, the Philistines prepared to attack Israel, and Saul lead out his army to face them at [[Gilboa]], but before the battle decided to secretly consult the [[witch of Endor]] for advice. The witch, unaware of who he is, reminds Saul that the king (i.e. Saul himself) had made witchery a [[capital punishment|capital offence]], but after being assured that Saul wouldn't harm her, the witch conjures up the ghost of [[Samuel]]. Samuel's ghost tells Saul that he would lose the battle and his life.
+
In any case, Ish-bosheth/Esh-Baal apparently reigned as king of Israel from Saul's stronghold of Gibeah after Saul's death. David, meanwhile, reigned in Hebron as the king of a single tribe of Judah. There followed a long and bitter civil war between Judah (supporting David) and the northern tribes (supporting Ish-bosheth). Eventually, Abner, Saul's cousin and former army commander and advisor, broke with Ish-bosheth and went over to David's side, bringing with him key elements of the northern alliance, including David's first wife Michal. The war finally ended when Ish-bosheth was assassinated by two of his own men.  
  
Broken in spirit, Saul returns to the face the enemy, and the Israelites are duly defeated. To escape the ignominy of capture, Saul asks his armour bearer to kill him, but is forced to commit suicide by falling on his sword, when the armour bearer refuses. An [[Amalekite]] then kills Saul, upon his request, and when the Amalekite tells David, he has him killed. The body of Saul, with those of his sons, was fastened to the wall of Beth-shan, and his armor was hung up in the house of Ashtaroth. The inhabitants of Jabesh-gilead (the scene of Saul's first victory) rescue the bodies and take them to Jabesh-gilead, where they burn them, and bury the ashes.
+
With Ish-bosheth out of the picture, the leaders of the northern tribes came to David and declared him king by popular assent (2 Sam. 5). David held Saul's one remaining grandson, Mephibosheth, under gentle house arrest in Jerusalem. Several northern factions formerly loyal to Saul held out against David and mounted rebellions against his rule.
  
According to critical scholars, this, like much of the narrative of Saul's life, is essentially the splicing together of two originally distinct sources - the ''republican source'' and ''monarchial source''. To the ''republican source'' is assigned the narrative of the witch of endor, which clearly mocks Saul, and Saul's suicide, while the ''monarchial source'' has the Amakelite as Saul's killer. The narrative of the witch of Endor is considered to simply be a satire by the author of the ''republican source'' against Saul, rather than being based on any tradition, and Saul's death at the hands of another is considered more likely than suicide, which seems to be an attack on his character.
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==Critical View==
 +
[[Image:Bataille de Gelboé.jpg|thumb|right|240px|''The Battle of Gilboa'' by [[Jean Fouquet]]]]
 +
An objective assessment of Saul's contribution to the history of Israel necessitates an attempt to liberate the "historical Saul" from the pro-Davidic narrative that constitutes our only source for his reign. One has only to recognize that the writers allow Saul's adversary, David, to deliver his eulogy to understand this.
  
==Classical Rabbinical Views==
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In what sense is it even accurate to think of Saul as a "king" other than the fact that he was reportedly anointed as such? He was reportedly able to muster and lead a very effective army, but other than the degree of his military success what did he do as a king? Did he truly unite the Israelite tribes into a national federation with a centralized administration?
  
Two opposing views of Saul are found in classical rabbinical literature. One is based on the [[reverse logic]] that punishment is a proof of guilt, and therefore seeks to rob Saul of any halo which might surround him; typically this view is similar to the ''republican source''. The passage referring to Saul as ''a choice young man, and goodly'' (1 Samuel 9:2) is in this view interpreted as meaning that Saul was not good in every respect, but ''goodly'' only with respect to his personal appearance (Num. Rashi 9:28). According to this view, Saul is only a ''weak branch'' (Gen. Rashi 25:3), owing his kingship not to his own merits, but rather to his grandfather, who had been accustomed to light the streets for those who went to the ''bet ha-midrash'', and had received as his reward the promise that one of his grandsons should sit upon the throne (Lev. Rashi 9:2).
+
The answers to such questions are not easy, since so little of such information is given in the narrative, and some of the sources seem to come from a later period in which the monarchic institutions were well established and editors may have projected the realities of their own day back into the history of Israel under Saul.
  
The second view of Saul makes him appear in the most favorable light as man, as hero, and as king. This view is similar to that of the ''monarchial source''. In this view it was on account of his modesty that he did not reveal the fact that he had been anointed king (1 Samuel 10:16; Meg. 13b); and he was extraordinarily upright as well as perfectly just. Nor was there any one more pious than he (M. Ḳ. 16b; Ex. Rashi 30:12); for when he ascended the throne he was as pure as a child, and had never committed sin (Yoma 22b). He was marvelously handsome; and the maidens who told him concerning Samuel (cf 1 Samuel 9:11-13) talked so long with him that they might observe his beauty the more (Ber. 48b). In war he was able to march 120 miles without rest. When he received the command to smite Amalek (1 Samuel 15:3), Saul said: ''For one found slain the [[Torah]] requires a [[sin offering]] [Deuteronomy 21:1-9]; and here so many shall be slain. If the old have sinned, why should the young suffer; and if men have been guilty, why should the cattle be destroyed?'' It was this mildness that cost him his crown (Yoma 22b; Num. Rashi 1:10) —the fact that he was merciful even to his enemies, being indulgent to rebels themselves, and frequently waiving the homage due to him. But if his mercy toward a foe was a sin, it was his only one; and it was his misfortune that it was reckoned against him, while David, although he had committed much iniquity, was so favored that it was not remembered to his injury (Yoma 22b; M. Ḳ 16b, and Rashi ad loc.). In many other respects Saul was far superior to David, e.g., in having only one concubine, while David had many. Saul expended his own substance for the war, and although he knew that he and his sons would fall in battle, he nevertheless went boldly forward, while David heeded the wish of his soldiers not to go to war in person (2 Samuel 21:17; Lev. Rashi 26:7; Yalḳ., Sam. 138).
+
Archaeological findings, such as those discussed by Israel Finkelstein in ''The Bible Unearthed,'' lead many scholars to conclude that the population of Israel in the time of Saul was still very small and incapable of supporting an administrative apparatus resembling that of the other monarchic societies that surrounded, and sometimes infringed on, the Israelite tribal lands. Indeed, little in the narrative itself speaks of Saul as a governing monarch as opposed to a military leader. Rather than seeing him as failed king, we may do more justice to his memory to think of him as an effective fighter for Israel's independence who helped lay the foundation for a monarchy that was yet to emerge.
  
According to the Rabbis, Saul ate his food with due regard for the rules of [[ritual impurity|ceremonial purity]] prescribed for the sacrifice (Yalḳ., l.c.), and taught the people how they should slay cattle (cf 1 Samuel 14:34). As a reward for this, God himself gave Saul a sword on the day of battle, since no other sword suitable for him was found (ibid 13:22). Saul's attitude toward David finds its excuse in the fact that his courtiers were all tale-bearers, and slandered David to him (Deut. Rashi 5:10); and in like manner he was incited by Doeg against the priests of Nob (1 Samuel 22:16-19; Yalḳ., Sam. 131) - this act was forgiven him, however, and a heavenly voice (''bat ḳol'') was heard, proclaiming: ''Saul is the chosen one of God'' (Ber. 12b). His anger at the Gibeonites (2 Samuel 21:2) was not personal hatred, but was induced by zeal for the welfare of Israel (Num. Rashi 8:4). The fact that he made his daughter remarry (1 Samuel 25:44), finds its explanation in his (Saul's) view that her betrothal to David had been gained by false pretenses, and was therefore invalid (Sanhedrin 19b). During the lifetime of Saul there was no idolatry in Israel. The famine in the reign of David (cf 2 Samuel 21:1) was to punish the people, because they had not accorded Saul the proper honours at his burial (Num. Rashi 8:4). In [[Sheol]], Saul dwells with Samuel, which is a proof that all has been forgiven him ('Er. 53b).
+
Regarding the text itself, according to critical scholars, the story of Saul's life is essentially a splicing together of two or more originally distinct sources.
  
{| align="center" cellpadding="2" border="2"
+
*A ''monarchial source'' begins with the divinely appointed birth of Samuel, though many scholars think it originally referred to Saul. It then describes Saul's battle against the Ammonites, his designation as king by the people, and his brave attempt to lead them against the Philistines.
|-
+
*A ''republican source'' includes such themes as Samuel's opposition to the institution of the monarchy, Saul's usurpation of the priestly office, Saul's failure to follow God's instructions in the holy war against the Amalekites, David's choice to spare Saul's life as "the Lord's anointed," and Saul's decision to consult the "witch" of Endor.
| width="40%" align="center" | '''[[Kingdom of Israel]]'''
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*Scholars also speculate that a ''sanctuaries source'' may exist, related to the history of various holy places such as Gilgal, Carmel, Bethel, etc. Finally, the hand of a "redactor" is seen, a later editor who has inserted various summaries and judgments in accordance with the viewpoint of his particular period.
| width="30%" align="center" | Succeeded by:<br>'''[[Ish-bosheth]]'''
 
|}
 
  
{{JewishEncyclopedia}}
+
==Notes==
 +
<references/>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
  
*[[Wellhausen]], ''Der Text der Bücher Samuelis''
+
This article incorporates text from the 1901-1906 ''Jewish Encyclopedia'', a publication now in the public domain.
*K. [[Budde]], ''Die Bücher Richter und Samuel'', 1890, pp. 167-276;
 
*S. R. Driver, ''Notes on the Hebrew Text of the Books of Samuel'', 1890;
 
*T. K. Cheyne, Aids to the Devout Study of Criticism, 1892, pp. 1-126;
 
*H. P. Smith, ''Old Testament History'', 1903, ch. vii.;
 
*Cheyne and Black, ''Encyclopedia Biblica''
 
  
[[Category:Kings of ancient Israel]]
+
*Budde, K. ''Die Bücher Richter und Samuel.'' 1890. pp. 167-276.
[[Category:Tanakh people]]
+
*Cheyne, T. K. ''Aids to the Devout Study of Criticism.'' 1892. pp. 1-126.
 +
*Driver, S. R. ''Notes on the Hebrew Text of the Books of Samuel.'' 1890.
 +
*Finkelstein, Israel. ''The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts.'' New York: Free. 2002. ISBN 0684869136
 +
*Finkelstein, Israel, and Silberman, David. ''David and Solomon: In Search of the Bible's Sacred Kings and the Roots of the Western Tradition.'' New York: Free. (Simon and Schuster) 2006. ISBN 0743243625
 +
*Kirsch, Jonathan. ''King David: The Real Life of the Man Who Ruled Israel.'' Hendersonville, TN: Ballantine. 2000. ISBN 0345432754
 +
*Pinsky, Robert. ''The Life of David.'' Schocken. 2005. ISBN 0805242031
 +
*Sanford, John A. ''King Saul, the Tragic Hero: A Study in Individuation.'' Paulist. 1985. ISBN 0809126583
 +
*Smith, H. P. ''Old Testament History.'' 1903. ch. vii.
  
== External links ==
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== External Links ==
*[http://www.moshereiss.org/articles/23_samuel.htm SAMUEL AND SAUL: A NEGATIVE SYMBIOSIS by Rabbi Moshe Reiss]
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All links retrieved December 23, 2022.
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* Jewish Encyclopedia.com. [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=275&letter=S&search=saul Saul]  
  
 
[[Category: Philosophy and religion]]
 
[[Category: Philosophy and religion]]
[[Category: Religion]]
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[[Category: religion]]
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[[category: biography]]
  
 
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{{Credit|75814448}}

Latest revision as of 17:04, 23 December 2022


Samuel blesses Saul to be Israel's first king

Saul (or Sha'ul) (Hebrew: שָׁאוּל, meaning "given" or "lent") was the first king of the ancient Kingdom of Israel who reigned from about 1020–1000 B.C.E.

Described in the Bible as a man of uncommon promise and valor, Saul united the tribes of Israel against the power of the Philistines, but lost the support of a key ally—Samuel, the powerful prophet and judge who had initially identified and anointed him as God's chosen leader. Despite subsequent military successes and a promising heir in his son Jonathan, Saul became a tragic figure. He was plagued by what the Bible describes as "an evil spirit from the Lord," and what psychologists would recognize as classic symptoms of manic-depression.

Much of the later part of Saul's reign was consumed by fighting against Israel's enemies on one hand and seeking to destroy his divinely-appointed successor, David, on the other. He died in battle soon after the death of his son Jonathan, leaving his lesser sons as heirs. Within a few decades, his rival, David, had brought Saul's former kingdom under his sway and taken his only surviving heir into captivity.

It should be noted that the story of Saul is largely written and edited by biblical writers who favored the southern, or Davidic, Kingdom of Judah. Our picture of Saul is therefore not an objective one. If his own supporters had written histories of his reign which survived intact, we would no doubt have a very different portrait of him.

Nativity and Youth

According to the Books of Samuel, Saul was the son of a man named Kish, and a member of the tribe of Benjamin. We are told little about Saul's youth other than that he was "an impressive young man without equal among the Israelites—a head taller than any of the others" (1 Sam. 9:2).

However, biblical scholars suggest that some of the details in the story of Saul's childhood may actually be found in the infancy narrative now attributed to Samuel. Evidence for this is found in the meaning of Saul's name and in that the story of Samuel's infancy seems, in some respects, to describe that of a future king rather than a prophet.

The Hebrew version of Saul's name can mean, "lent," "asked for," or "given," and Samuel's mother Hanna seems to be making a pun on this word when she says to Eli the priest:

The Lord has granted me what I asked [sha'al] of him. So now I give [sha'al] him to the Lord. For his whole life he will be given over [sha'al] to the Lord" (1 Sam: 27-28).

Moreover, the Song of Hannah, a psalm of praise expressing Hannah's response to the birth of her son, can more easily be interpreted as referring to her son as a monarch than a prophet or judge: "He [God] will give strength to his king and exalt the horn of his anointed" (1 Sam. 2:10).

Whether or not the biblical story of Samuel's childhood originally described that of Saul, the rabbinical tradition and the Bible itself are unanimous in portraying the young Saul as a boy of great promise. The Jewish Encyclopedia, summarizing the Talmudic praise of Saul, says:

He was extraordinarily upright as well as perfectly just. Nor was there any one more pious than he; for when he ascended the throne he was as pure as a child, and had never committed sin. He was marvelously handsome; and the maidens who told him concerning Samuel talked so long with him that they might observe his beauty the more.[1]

Appointment as King

The Bible gives a threefold account of how Saul came to be appointed king. First, he is privately chosen by the Prophet Samuel and anointed as king. Second, he is re-anointed in public after God confirmed the choice by lottery. Finally, he is confirmed by popular acclaim after uniting the tribes of Israel in victorious battle. Modern biblical scholars, on the other hand, tend to view the accounts as distinct, representing at least two and possibly three separate traditions which were later woven into a single account.

  • (1 Samuel 9:1-10:16): Saul travels with a servant to look for his father's she-asses, who have strayed. Leaving his home at Gibeah, they eventually wander to the district of Zuph, at which point Saul suggests abandoning their search. Saul's servant however, suggests that they should consult the local "seer" first. The seer (later identified as Samuel) offers hospitality to Saul when he nears the high place at Ramah, and later anoints him in private.
  • (1 Samuel 10:17-24 and 12:1-5): Seeing that Samuel's sons were corrupt, the Israelites demand a king to rule and protect them. Samuel therefore assembles the people at Mizpah and, despite having strong reservations, obeys God's instruction to appoint a king. In this version, a lottery system is used to determine the choice. First the tribe of Benjamin is chosen, and then Saul. The seemingly unsuspecting Saul seeks to avoid his fate by hiding in the baggage. He is soon discovered, anointed, and publicly proclaimed. The text notes, however, that certain "troublemakers" grumble against the choice.
  • (1 Samuel 11:1-11 and 11:15): In this story, Saul is living as a private landholder. He rises to the kingship by uniting the several tribes to relieve the people of Jabesh Gilead, who are being besieged by the Ammonites. After Saul gains victory, the people congregate at Gilgal, and acclaim Saul as king. (This account is portrayed in the text as a confirmation of Saul's already known kingship, but some scholars take the view that it describes a separate tradition about the origin of Saul's monarchy, which a later editor has characterized as a confirmation.)

In any case, the tribe of Benjamin was an unlikely choice for a king. Saul's own declaration "Am not I a Benjamite, of the smallest of the tribes of Israel?" betrays not only his own lack of confidence but also the fact that Benjamin was, by this time, a weak and despised part of the Israelite confederacy (1 Sam. 9:21). Indeed, the final chapter of the Book of Judges speaks of the Israelites swearing that "Not one of us will give his daughter in marriage to a Benjamite" (Judges 21:1). Although this oath was later rescinded, there can be little doubt that the choice of a Benjamite as king would be problematic to many among the other tribes.

Saul's Victories

On the foundation of his fame in winning a victory over the Ammonites, Saul amassed an army to throw off the Philistine yoke. Just before this battle, however, he had a serious falling out with Samuel. Samuel had instructed Saul to wait seven days for him at Gilgal. Saul did so, but as the hour of Samuel’s coming approached, Saul’s men begin to desert. When the appointed time came and went without Samuel appeance, Saul prepared for battle by offering sacrifice to God. Samuel soon arrived on the scene and condemned Saul, apparently for usurping the priestly role. Samuel withdrew his support for Saul and declared that God has chosen another to replace him. Deprived of Samuel's blessing, Saul's army became small, numbering only around six hundred men. The text portrayed the Philistine army as vastly outnumbering the Israelites and also as having superior weaponry due to their mastery of the art of metalworking, while the Israelites use mostly flint and wood weapons.

Map showing several locations related to Saul's life.

Jonathan and a small group of courageous Israelites cleverly snuck into a Philistine outpost without Saul's knowledge to attack them from within, causing panic. However, trouble was brewing for the Israelites spiritually. Saul has vowed that his men would not eat until the battle was over, and Jonathan—who has not heard the vow—consumed wild honey. Nevertheless, the battle went well. When the Israelites noticed the chaos in the Philistine camp, Saul joined in the attack and the Philistines were driven out. However, some of his soldiers sinned by eating plundered meat that had not been properly slaughtered.

Saul asked his priest, Ahijah, to use divination to ask God whether he should pursue the Philistines and slaughter them, but God gave no answer. Convinced that God's silence was due to someone's sin, Saul conducted a lottery and discovered Jonathan's sin of eating forbidden honey. Saul determined to slay Jonathan for his offense, but the soldiers came to Jonathan's defense. Saul relented, and he also cut off his pursuit of the Philistines.

Despite the lack of a decisive conclusion to the war against the Philistines, the Bible states that Saul was an effective military leader:

After Saul had assumed rule over Israel, he fought against their enemies on every side: Moab, the Ammonites, Edom, the kings of Zobah, and the Philistines. Wherever he turned, he inflicted punishment on them.

He was assisted in these efforts by his war captain, Abner, as well as by David and Jonathan. The record says little about his administrative efforts or the details of the Israelite tribal alliances. Later it was learned that the tribe of Judah supported David in opposition to Saul and his progeny, whose support seemed to come more from the northern tribes, but few details are given.

Rejection

Samuel appeared again and gave Saul another chance. He was told to make holy war against the people known as the Amalekites. To conduct a war acceptable to God, Saul was instructed to slay every last one of these people, including women and children, as well as livestock. However, he was also told that his troops must refrain from taking plunder of any kind.

Saul carried out a widespread assault against the Amalekites, killing all of them except their king, Agag. His troops, moreover, kept some of the best cattle alive. Saul erected a victory monument at Mt. Carmel and returned to Gilgal. Samuel, however, did not share his sense of joy. He angrily accused the king of disobedience. The bewildered Saul protested, saying:

I did obey the Lord. I went on the mission the Lord assigned me. I completely destroyed the Amalekites and brought back Agag their king. The soldiers took sheep and cattle from the plunder, the best of what was devoted to God, in order to sacrifice them to the Lord your God at Gilgal.

Samuel rejected this explanation. Saul then admitted his sin and begged for forgiveness, pleading for Samuel to return with him "so that I might worship God." Samuel, however, declared that God had rejected Saul as king. He turned away, and Saul desperately grabbed his garment, which ripped. Samuel interpreted this as a prophetic act, confirming that God had torn the kingdom from Saul. Samuel made one concession and allowed Saul to worship God with him. He then commanded that Agag be brought forth. He promptly "hew[ed] Agag in pieces" and left the scene, never to see Saul again in this life (1 Sam. 15:35).

Saul and David

First encounter (two versions)

David and Saul (1885) by J. Kronberg.

As David arrived on the scene, Saul was cast firmly in the role of antagonist. He became the dark central figure in a tragedy of Shakespearian proportions.

The text tells us that God's spirit had left Saul, and an "evil spirit from God" had obsessed him (1 Sam. 16:14). Saul requested soothing music, and a servant recommended David, the son of Jesse, who was renowned as a skillful harpist and warrior. David was appointed as Saul's armor bearer, playing the harp as needed to calm Saul's moods. It is mentioned later that Samuel had previously gone to Bethlehem and secretly anointed the young David to be Israel's king.

The story of David and Goliath intervenes at this point, clearly from a different source than the story above. In this story, the Philistines returned with an army to attack Israel, and Jesse sent David not as harpist to the king, but simply to carry food to his older brothers who were serving in the army (1 Samuel 17:1-18:5). David learned that the giant Goliath had challenged Israel to send its champion to fight him. David volunteered for the task. Saul, who in this story had not met David previously, appointed the lad as his champion. David defeated Goliath and became the king's favorite. Jonathan, a kindred spirit to David, made a pact with him, giving him his own clothing and weapons. Saul dispatched David on various military errands, and he won renown. The story took an ominous turn, however, as the Israelite women took up the chant: "Saul has slain his thousands and David his tens of thousands." Saul then began to see David as a possible threat to the throne.

Saul Turns against David

The text gives us an insight into Saul's spiritual character at this point, as it describes him as "prophesying in his house" (1 Sam 18:10). Earlier it described him as engaging in ecstatic prophesy with the bands of roving prophet-musicians associated with Samuel (1 Sam. 10:5). One might picture David and Saul engaging in this type of intense spiritual-musical activity together, rather than David softly strumming while a depressed Saul lies next to him. This other-worldly tendency in Saul also apparently made him vulnerable to spiritual obsession. Thus, while Saul was prophesying, the evil spirit from God "came forcefully upon him" and inspired him to attempt to murder David. David twice eluded the king's attacks, and Saul then sent David away, fearing the lord's presence with him.

Ever caught in what modern readers would recognize as the throes of bi-polarism, Saul then decided to give David the hand of his daughter. First he offered David his eldest, Merab, and then Michal, the younger, who had fallen in love with David. David stated that he was too poor to marry a king's daughter, but Saul insisted, telling David that the bride-price would only be one hundred foreskins from the Philistines. The narrator informs us that Saul actually hoped that the Philistines would prevail over David, but the champion returned with twice the required number. Having tendered this gory gift, David was married to Michal. Until this point, the text states that David continued to act as one of Saul's war captains, proving especially effective in several campaigns against the Philistines. The focus of the narrative, however, is to provide the details of several further plots by Saul against David.

Jonathan dissuaded Saul from a plan to kill David and informed David of the plot. David (quite foolishly if the order of the story is correct) once again played the harp for Saul, and Saul again tried to murder him. Saul then tried to have David killed during the night, but Michal helped him escape and tricked his pursuers by disguising a household idol to look like David in bed. David fled to Samuel.

Saul pursued David, but whatever evil influence controlled him was no match for the spiritual power of Samuel. The text here contradicts its earlier declaration that Samuel and Saul never met again:

The Spirit of God came even upon him, and he walked along prophesying until he came to Naioth. He stripped off his robes and also prophesied in Samuel's presence. He lay that way all that day and night (1 Sam. 19:23-24).

Leaving Samuel's protection, David went to Jonathan, who agreed to act as David's intelligence agent in Saul's house. Saul saw through this and castigated Jonathan for disloyalty. It became clear that Saul wanted David dead. Jonathan told David of Saul's intent, and David again fled. Saul later caused Michal to marry another man in place of David.

Saul Pursues David

Saul now treated David as both a rival and a fugitive traitor. An Edomite named Doeg told Saul that David had been hiding in a place named Nob, and that the priest there, Ahimelech, had helped David by giving material aid and consulting God for him. Saul summoned Ahimelech and castigated him for his assistance to David, then ordered henchmen to kill Ahimelech and the other priests of Nob. None of Saul's henchmen were willing to do this, so Doeg offered to do it instead, and he killed 85 priests. Doeg also slaughtered every man, woman, and child still in Nob except Ahimilech's son Abiathar, who made good his escape and informed David of events.

David amassed about four hundred disaffected men together as a group of outlaws. With these men, David attacked the Philistines at Keilah and evicted them from the city. Hearing the news, Saul led his army there, intending to besiege the city. David learned of Saul's plan and, through divination, discovered that the citizens of Keilah would betray him to Saul. He fled to Ziph, where Saul again pursued him. The Bible retains two versions of the humorous story of Saul and David at Ziph, both involving David as a clever trickster who is in a position to slay Saul, but refrains due to his belief that to slay "the Lord's anointed" would be a sin.

Tiring of playing cat-and-mouse with Saul, David fled to the Philistine city of Gath, the birthplace of Goliath, where he offered himself as a mercenary general to King Achish, Israel's adversary. Seeing that his rival had gone over to the enemy and seemed no longer to seek the throne of Israel, Saul broke off his pursuit.

Battle of Mt. Gilboa

The medium of Endor contacts the spirit of Samuel, who predicts Saul's doom.

The Philistines now prepared to attack Israel, and Saul led out his army to face them at Gilboa. Seeking in vain for God's advice through prophets, dreams, and divination, Saul searched for a medium through whom he could consult with the departed soul of Samuel. In so doing, Saul broke his own law against such activity. At the village of Endor, he found a woman who agreed to conjure the spirit of the famous judge. Samuel's ghost only confirmed Saul's doom—that he would lose the battle, that Jonathan would be killed, and that Saul would soon join Samuel in Sheol.

Broken in spirit, Saul returned to the face the enemy, and the Israelites were soundly defeated. Three of Saul's sons—Jonathan, Abinadab, and Malki-Shua—were slain. Saul himself suffered a critical arrow wound. To escape the ignominy of capture, Saul asked his armor bearer to kill him, but commited suicide by falling on his sword when the armor bearer refused (1 Sam. 31 5).

In an alternative version of the story, a young Amalekite presented Saul's crown to David—here the Amalekites had not been wiped out—and claimed to have finished off Saul at his request (2 Sam. 1). The bodies of Saul and his sons were publicly displayed by the Philistines on the wall of Beth-shan, while Saul’s armor was hung up in the temple of the goddess Ashtaroth/Astarte. However, loyal inhabitants of Jabesh Gilead, remembering Saul as their savior, rescued the bodies, where they were honorably burned and later buried (1 Sam. 21:21-13).

Saul's Legacy

Samuel preserved a hymn praising Saul, which is characterized as having been composed by David upon hearing of Saul's death. It reads, in part:

Your glory, O Israel, lies slain on your heights.


How the mighty have fallen!
Tell it not in Gath, proclaim it not in the streets of Ashkelon,
Lest the daughters of the Philistines be glad,
Lest the daughters of the uncircumcised rejoice.


O mountains of Gilboa,
May you have neither dew nor rain,
Nor fields that yield offerings of grain .
For there the shield of the mighty was defiled,
the shield of Saul—-no longer rubbed with oil.


From the blood of the slain,
from the flesh of the mighty,
the bow of Jonathan did not turn back,


the sword of Saul did not return unsatisfied (2 Sam. 1:20-22).

Sources are rather confused regarding Saul's descendants. According to 1 Samuel, Saul had three sons, Jonathan, Ishvi and Malki-Shua, and two daughters, Merab and Michal. Saul's primary wife is named as Ahinoam, daughter of Ahimaaz. 1 Chronicales 8:33 says that Saul's sons were named Jonathan, Malki-Shua, Abinadab, and Esh-Baal (Man of Baal). 2 Samuel calls the latter son Ish-bosheth (Man of Shame). In addition, 2 Samuel 21:8 refers to "Armoni and Mephibosheth” as "the two sons of Aiah's daughter Rizpah, whom she had borne to Saul." Earlier references to Mephibosheth in 2 Samuel, however, speak of him as Jonathan's son, not Saul's.

In any case, Ish-bosheth/Esh-Baal apparently reigned as king of Israel from Saul's stronghold of Gibeah after Saul's death. David, meanwhile, reigned in Hebron as the king of a single tribe of Judah. There followed a long and bitter civil war between Judah (supporting David) and the northern tribes (supporting Ish-bosheth). Eventually, Abner, Saul's cousin and former army commander and advisor, broke with Ish-bosheth and went over to David's side, bringing with him key elements of the northern alliance, including David's first wife Michal. The war finally ended when Ish-bosheth was assassinated by two of his own men.

With Ish-bosheth out of the picture, the leaders of the northern tribes came to David and declared him king by popular assent (2 Sam. 5). David held Saul's one remaining grandson, Mephibosheth, under gentle house arrest in Jerusalem. Several northern factions formerly loyal to Saul held out against David and mounted rebellions against his rule.

Critical View

The Battle of Gilboa by Jean Fouquet

An objective assessment of Saul's contribution to the history of Israel necessitates an attempt to liberate the "historical Saul" from the pro-Davidic narrative that constitutes our only source for his reign. One has only to recognize that the writers allow Saul's adversary, David, to deliver his eulogy to understand this.

In what sense is it even accurate to think of Saul as a "king" other than the fact that he was reportedly anointed as such? He was reportedly able to muster and lead a very effective army, but other than the degree of his military success what did he do as a king? Did he truly unite the Israelite tribes into a national federation with a centralized administration?

The answers to such questions are not easy, since so little of such information is given in the narrative, and some of the sources seem to come from a later period in which the monarchic institutions were well established and editors may have projected the realities of their own day back into the history of Israel under Saul.

Archaeological findings, such as those discussed by Israel Finkelstein in The Bible Unearthed, lead many scholars to conclude that the population of Israel in the time of Saul was still very small and incapable of supporting an administrative apparatus resembling that of the other monarchic societies that surrounded, and sometimes infringed on, the Israelite tribal lands. Indeed, little in the narrative itself speaks of Saul as a governing monarch as opposed to a military leader. Rather than seeing him as failed king, we may do more justice to his memory to think of him as an effective fighter for Israel's independence who helped lay the foundation for a monarchy that was yet to emerge.

Regarding the text itself, according to critical scholars, the story of Saul's life is essentially a splicing together of two or more originally distinct sources.

  • A monarchial source begins with the divinely appointed birth of Samuel, though many scholars think it originally referred to Saul. It then describes Saul's battle against the Ammonites, his designation as king by the people, and his brave attempt to lead them against the Philistines.
  • A republican source includes such themes as Samuel's opposition to the institution of the monarchy, Saul's usurpation of the priestly office, Saul's failure to follow God's instructions in the holy war against the Amalekites, David's choice to spare Saul's life as "the Lord's anointed," and Saul's decision to consult the "witch" of Endor.
  • Scholars also speculate that a sanctuaries source may exist, related to the history of various holy places such as Gilgal, Carmel, Bethel, etc. Finally, the hand of a "redactor" is seen, a later editor who has inserted various summaries and judgments in accordance with the viewpoint of his particular period.

Notes

  1. Jewish Encyclopedia.com. Saul. Retrieved July 16, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

This article incorporates text from the 1901-1906 Jewish Encyclopedia, a publication now in the public domain.

  • Budde, K. Die Bücher Richter und Samuel. 1890. pp. 167-276.
  • Cheyne, T. K. Aids to the Devout Study of Criticism. 1892. pp. 1-126.
  • Driver, S. R. Notes on the Hebrew Text of the Books of Samuel. 1890.
  • Finkelstein, Israel. The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts. New York: Free. 2002. ISBN 0684869136
  • Finkelstein, Israel, and Silberman, David. David and Solomon: In Search of the Bible's Sacred Kings and the Roots of the Western Tradition. New York: Free. (Simon and Schuster) 2006. ISBN 0743243625
  • Kirsch, Jonathan. King David: The Real Life of the Man Who Ruled Israel. Hendersonville, TN: Ballantine. 2000. ISBN 0345432754
  • Pinsky, Robert. The Life of David. Schocken. 2005. ISBN 0805242031
  • Sanford, John A. King Saul, the Tragic Hero: A Study in Individuation. Paulist. 1985. ISBN 0809126583
  • Smith, H. P. Old Testament History. 1903. ch. vii.

External Links

All links retrieved December 23, 2022.

  • Jewish Encyclopedia.com. Saul

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