|
First
Samuel
First Samuel was taught by Dr. James Modlish
CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN
This
chapter may be one of the most popular chapters in the
word of God. Certainly hundreds of thousands, if not
millions of sermons and Sunday School lessons have been
taught on David and Goliath. There is much devotional and
seed-thought material contained in the account of this
great historical confrontation. Goliath represents Satan,
possibly the Anti-Christ, and possibly the "giant" of sin
in our own lives that must be confronted head on and
conquered.
OUTLINE OF
THE CHAPTER:
I.
GOLIATH OF GATH (1-11)
II. GOLIATH
CHALLENGES ISRAEL FOR FORTY DAYS (12-19)
III. "WHO IS
THIS UNCIRCUMCISED PHILISTINE?" (20-27)
IV. "IS
THERE NOT A CAUSE?" (28-31)
V. "THOU ART
NOT ABLE
FOR THOU ARE BUT A YOUTH"
VI. "THE
BATTLE IS THE LORD'S" (38-54)
VII. SAUL
TAKES A CLOSER LOOK AT DAVID (55-58)
I. GOLIATH
OF GATH - (1-11)
Once
again Israel faces its perennial enemy, the Philistines.
We have seen confrontations in chapters (4 and 14) with
these people. This time one man gains the attention of
all, Goliath.
Goliath is
presented as a well-seasoned combat infantryman. He
survived many skirmishes to date, making him a safe bet
one on one. Yet, not only does the man possess the
military savvy to survive the most dangerous of games, he
possesses some very basic physical advantages. Goliath
was a "giant" of a man. The existence of giants is well
documented, scripturally; see (Gen. 6:4; Num. 13-14;
Deut. 2:10,20-21). Depending on the exact meaning of
cubit, Goliath could have been anywhere from 8'6" to 13
feet tall. The approximate weight of his weapons and
armor surely reinforce this fact. We could only guess at
the man's weight, but if he were a lean man he would
still have weighed 300 pounds and could very likely have
been 450-1000 pounds!
Physically
speaking the only possible match for Goliath would be the
king, Saul. (9:2). This had probably crossed Saul's mind
but he appears, at this time, to be unwilling to
volunteer.
Goliath
challenges everyone in the Israeli camp to a one on one
showdown to settle the whole dispute. Wouldn't it be nice
if wars could be settled this way? What man will submit
because of another's defeat? The Philistine's didn't
(51-53). Wars will not cease as long as man continues to
try to bring peace. War is God's judgment on sin here,
and Hell is God's judgment on sin hereafter.
II. GOLIATH
CHALLENGES ISRAEL FOR FORTY DAYS - (12-19)
The
challenge continues day and night for forty days. Forty
is numerically representative of testing in the
scriptures. Jesus was tempted forty days. Israel wandered
in the wilderness forty years. It rained forty days and
forty nights upon Noah and his family. Satan is a
relentless enemy pictured in Goliath. The challenge never
goes away, it must be faced head on. You'd think that
Goliath would have gotten bored with his little routine.
After forty days of name calling, I wonder if anyone
really wanted to fight?!
David is
commissioned to bring a care package from home to his
brothers in the field. Jesse asks David to bring back a
pledge, something to confirm that the boys are
alright.
III. "WHO IS
THIS UNCIRCUMCISED PHILISTINE?" - (20-27)
David
arrives at camp just as Goliath is going through his
daily chores (23). David is stunned as he watches the
king, his brothers and fellow soldiers back down from the
big "blow hard". A reward is declared by the king.
"Anyone who kills Goliath will earn for his family a
permanent tax-exemption and unlimited expense account
(25). David's response is that there shouldn't have to be
a reward to find an opponent for the giant, they ought to
be standing in line waiting for their turn. After all, he
has defied the armies of the living God'.
David,
unlike Saul (14:24), does not take the affront
personally, he sees Goliath cursing and Note, in (Joshua
15:16,17) Caleb makes a similar offer. The offer "make
his father's house free in Israel" (25). This helps
explain Saul's inquiry of (vss. 55-58). Saul had
committed himself to the family of the victor David. See
how well he kept his vow in (22:1).
IV. "IS
THERE NOT A CAUSE?" - (28-31)
We
made a note in one of our earlier studies that the vast
majority of humanity has no cause or purpose in life. Man
needs a reason to live, it keeps him going from one day
to the next. The Christian indeed has a cause - to bring
honor and glory to Jesus Christ through the proper
dissemination and propagation of the word of God.
Eliab,
David's brother, is probably embarrassed by his little
brother's brazen remarks. He knows he's right, yet he
will not accept the truth from one less than himself. The
questions and accusations of verse 28 are oft used tools
to divert attention away from oneself! Eliab's
frustration is vented on young David.
V. "THOU ART
NOT ABLE ... FOR THOU ARE BUT A YOUTH" -
(32-37)
The
young "whippersnapper" upstart David begins telling
everyone how it should be done. It isn't any wonder that
David wasn't taken seriously. Young, inexperienced and
physically minute in comparison to Goliath, what could he
do? Samuel, Saul, Eliab and Goliath all had one thing in
common, they all under estimated the youth David.
Alexander the Great conquered the world by the time he
was 33. Although inexperience is certainly a disadvantage
of being young, a young person has time, energy and
desire in his favor. In this case, the faith of David was
his greatest asset. Many older Christians allow
themselves to slither into mold of lethargy, apathy and
mediocrity in spiritual things. The young, excited,
energetic Christian, often injects more spiritual
enthusiasm into a church body than any ten of the "church
pillars." "Look not on his countenance ... the Lord
looketh on the heart."
VI. "THE
BATTLE IS THE LORD'S" - (38-54)
Even
though Saul stands physically taller than his men, the
challenge of the giant, he declines. He is not that far
removed from spiritual things that he does not recognize
true godly conviction when he sees it. David is given the
sanction to fight.
Saul thinks
that his personal armor will be a help to the boy, but it
doesn't fit and it has not been proven to David's liking.
There is a tremendous practical lesson to be learned.
Don't try to be someone else, don't try to fight in
someone else's armor. Didn't God have a suit of armor
already picked out for David? Of course he did -
Goliath's (54).
David chose
his weapon. He had used the sling many times before. He
felt comfortable with it and he knew it could do the job.
A crisis is no time to try out a new weapon. As a
Christian, we must develop confidence in our spiritual
weapons. We must use them daily, so that they will be
effective during the time of greatest need.
Notice that
David does not want to vindicate or defend himself. God
will honor the man whose motives are inspired by and for
God and God's people. "...all the assembly shall know
that the Lord saveth...." David knew that we don't fight
our battles alone, nor are those battles ours.
Goliath has
been sitting or lying down (48), helmet removed, he rises
to meet his antagonist, David. Look at David's
enthusiasm, he "hasted, and ran toward...." WHAM!! "The
bigger they are the harder they fall." Could it be that
the Lord put a little supernatural "zing" on the stone
from David's sling?
VII. SAUL
TAKES A CLOSER LOOK AT DAVID - (55-58)
Saul's
inquiry into David's father tells us two things. The
first very obvious, the second much more subtle. Saul has
made a promise to the family of the victor (25), he wants
to find out who his father is so that he might fulfill
it. This is the obvious. Secondly, Samuel's words of
(15:28) are ringing in the ears of Saul, "a neighbor of
thine, that is better than thou." Saul must've been a bit
jealous of the young man who dared to attempt that which
he would not.
|