Chapter 69
David
Called to the Throne
[This
chapter is based on 2 Samuel 2 to 5:5.]
THE
death of Saul removed the dangers that had made David an exile. The way
was now open for him to return to his own land. When the days of mourning
for Saul and Jonathan were ended, "David inquired of the Lord,
saying, Shall I go up into any of the cities of Judah? And the Lord said
unto him, Go up. And David said, Whither shall I go up? And He said, Unto
Hebron."
Hebron was
twenty miles north from Beersheba, and about midway between that city and
the future site of Jerusalem. It was originally called Kirjath-arba, the
city of Arba, the father of Anak. Later it was called Mamre, and here was
the burial place of the patriarchs, "the cave of Machpelah."
Hebron had been the possession of Caleb and was now the chief city of
Judah. It lies in a valley surrounded by fertile hill country and fruitful
lands. The most beautiful vineyards of Palestine were on its borders,
together with numerous plantations of olive and other fruit trees.
David and his
followers immediately prepared to obey the instruction which they had
received from God. The six hundred armed men, with their wives and
children, their flocks and herds, were soon on the way to Hebron. As the
caravan entered the city the men of Judah were waiting to welcome David as
the future king of Israel. Arrangements were at once made for his
coronation. "And there they anointed David king over the house of
Judah." But no effort was made to establish his authority by force
over the other tribes.
One of the
first acts of the new-crowned monarch was to express his tender regard for
the memory of Saul and Jonathan. Upon learning of the brave deed of the
men of Jabesh-gilead in rescuing the bodies of the fallen leaders and
giving them honorable burial, David sent an embassy to Jabesh with the
message,
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"Blessed be ye of the Lord, that ye have showed this
kindness unto your lord, even unto Saul, and have buried him. And now the
Lord show kindness and truth unto you: and I also will requite you this
kindness." And he announced his own accession to the throne of Judah
and invited the allegiance of those who had proved themselves so
truehearted.
The
Philistines did not oppose the action of Judah in making David king. They
had befriended him in his exile, in order to harass and weaken the kingdom
of Saul, and now they hoped that because of their former kindness to David
the extension of his power would, in the end, work to their advantage. But
David's reign was not to be free from trouble. With his coronation began
the dark record of conspiracy and rebellion. David did not sit upon a
traitor's throne; God had chosen him to be king of Israel, and there had
been no occasion for distrust or opposition. Yet hardly had his authority
been acknowledged by the men of Judah, when through the influence of Abner,
Ishbosheth, the son of Saul, was proclaimed king, and set upon a rival
throne in Israel.
Ishbosheth
was but a weak and incompetent representative of the house of Saul, while
David was pre-eminently qualified to bear the responsibilities of the
kingdom. Abner, the chief agent in raising Ishbosheth to kingly power, had
been commander-in-chief of Saul's army, and was the most distinguished man
in Israel. Abner knew that David had been appointed by the Lord to the
throne of Israel, but having so long hunted and pursued him, he was not
now willing that the son of Jesse should succeed to the kingdom over which
Saul had reigned.
The
circumstances under which Abner was placed served to develop his real
character and showed him to be ambitious and unprincipled. He had been
intimately associated with Saul and had been influenced by the spirit of
the king to despise the man whom God had chosen to reign over Israel. His
hatred had been increased by the cutting rebuke that David had given him
at the time when the cruse of water and the spear of the king had been
taken from the side of Saul as he slept in the camp. He remembered how
David had cried in the hearing of the king and the people of Israel,
"Art not thou a valiant man? and who is like to thee in Israel?
wherefore then hast thou not kept thy lord the king? . . . This thing is
not good that thou hast done. As the
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Lord liveth, ye are worthy to die,
because ye have not kept your master, the Lord's anointed." This
reproof had rankled in his breast, and he determined to carry out his
revengeful purpose and create division in Israel, whereby he himself might
be exalted. He employed the representative of departed royalty to advance
his own selfish ambitions and purposes. He knew that the people loved
Jonathan. His memory was cherished, and Saul's first successful campaigns
had not been forgotten by the army. With determination worthy a better
cause, this rebellious leader went forward to carry out his plans.
Mahanaim, on
the farther side of Jordan, was chosen as the royal residence, since it
offered the greatest security against attack, either from David or from
the Philistines. Here the coronation of Ishbosheth took place. His reign
was first accepted by the tribes east of Jordan, and was finally extended
over all Israel except Judah. For two years the son of Saul enjoyed his
honors in his secluded capital. But Abner, intent upon extending his power
over all Israel, prepared for aggressive warfare. And "there was long
war between the house of Saul and the house of David: but David waxed
stronger and stronger, and the house of Saul waxed weaker and
weaker."
At last
treachery overthrew the throne that malice and ambition had established.
Abner, becoming incensed against the weak and incompetent Ishbosheth,
deserted to David, with the offer to bring over to him all the tribes of
Israel. His proposals were accepted by the king, and he was dismissed with
honor to accomplish his purpose. But the favorable reception of so valiant
and famed a warrior excited the jealousy of Joab, the commander-in-chief
of David's army. There was a blood feud between Abner and Joab, the former
having slain Asahel, Joab's brother, during the war between Israel and
Judah. Now Joab, seeing an opportunity to avenge his brother's death and
rid himself of a prospective rival, basely took occasion to waylay and
murder Abner.
David, upon
hearing of this treacherous assault, exclaimed, "I and my kingdom are
guiltless before the Lord forever from the blood of Abner the son of Ner.
Let it rest on the head of Joab; and on all his father's house." In
view of the unsettled state of the kingdom, and the power and position of
the murderers-- for Joab's brother Abishai had been united with him--David
could not visit the crime with just retribution, yet he publicly
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manifested his abhorrence of the bloody deed. The burial of Abner was
attended with public honors. The army, with Joab at their head, were
required to take part in the services of mourning, with rent garments and
clothed in sackcloth. The king manifested his grief by keeping a fast upon
the day of burial; he followed the bier as chief mourner; and at the grave
he pronounced an elegy which was a cutting rebuke of the murderers.
"The king lamented over Abner, and said:
"Died
Abner as a fool dieth?
Thy hands were not bound,
Nor thy feet put into fetters:
As a man falleth before wicked men,
So fellest thou."
David's
magnanimous recognition of one who had been his bitter enemy won the
confidence and admiration of all Israel. "All the people took notice
of it, and it pleased them: as whatsoever the king did pleased all the
people. For all the people and all Israel understood that day that it was
not of the king to slay Abner the son of Ner." In the private circle
of his trusted counselors and attendants the king spoke of the crime, and
recognizing his own inability to punish the murderers as he desired, he
left them to the justice of God: "Know ye not that there is a prince
and a great man fallen this day in Israel? And I am this day weak, though
anointed king; and these men the sons of Zeruiah be too hard for me: the
Lord shall reward the doer of evil according to his wickedness."
Abner had
been sincere in his offers and representations to David, yet his motives
were base and selfish. He had persistently opposed the king of God's
appointment, in the expectation of securing honor to himself. It was
resentment, wounded pride, and passion that led him to forsake the cause
he had so long served; and in deserting to David he hoped to receive the
highest position of honor in his service. Had he succeeded in his purpose,
his talents and ambition, his great influence and want of godliness, would
have endangered the throne of David and the peace and prosperity of the
nation.
"When
Saul's son heard that Abner was dead in Hebron, his hands were feeble, and
all the Israelites were troubled." It was
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evident that the kingdom
could not long be maintained. Soon another act of treachery completed the
downfall of the waning power. Ishbosheth was foully murdered by two of his
captains, who, cutting off his head, hastened with it to the king of
Judah, hoping thus to ingratiate themselves in his favor.
They appeared
before David with the gory witness to their crime, saying, "Behold
the head of Ishbosheth the son of Saul thine enemy, which sought thy life;
and the Lord hath avenged my lord the king this day of Saul, and of his
seed." But David, whose throne God Himself had established, and whom
God had delivered from his adversaries, did not desire the aid of
treachery to establish his power. He told these murderers of the doom
visited upon him who boasted of slaying Saul. "How much more,"
he added, "when wicked men have slain a righteous person in his own
house upon his bed? shall I not therefore now require his blood of your
hand, and take you away from the earth? And David commanded his young men,
and they slew them. . . . But they took the head of Ishbosheth and buried
it in the sepulchre of Abner in Hebron."
After the
death of Ishbosheth there was a general desire among the leading men of
Israel that David should become king of all the tribes. "Then came
all the tribes of Israel to David unto Hebron, and spake, saying, Behold,
we are thy bone and thy flesh." They declared, "Thou wast he
that leddest out and broughtest in Israel: and the Lord said to thee, Thou
shalt feed My people Israel, and thou shalt be a captain over Israel. So
all the elders of Israel came to the king to Hebron; and King David made a
league with them in Hebron before the Lord." Thus through the
providence of God the way had been opened for him to come to the throne.
He had no personal ambition to gratify, for he had not sought the honor to
which he had been brought.
More than
eight thousand of the descendants of Aaron and of the Levites waited upon
David. The change in the sentiments of the people was marked and decisive.
The revolution was quiet and dignified, befitting the great work they were
doing. Nearly half a million souls, the former subjects of Saul, thronged
Hebron and its environs. The very hills and valleys were alive with the
multitudes. The hour for the coronation was appointed; the man who had
been expelled from the court of Saul, who had fled
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to the mountains and
hills and to the caves of the earth to preserve his life, was about to
receive the highest honor that can be conferred upon man by his fellow
man. Priests and elders, clothed in the garments of their sacred office,
officers and soldiers with glittering spear and helmet, and strangers from
long distances, stood to witness the coronation of the chosen king. David
was arrayed in the royal robe. The sacred oil was put upon his brow by the
high priest, for the anointing by Samuel had been prophetic of what would
take place at the inauguration of the king. The time had come, and David,
by solemn rite, was consecrated to his office as God's vicegerent. The
scepter was placed in his hands. The covenant of his righteous sovereignty
was written, and the people gave their pledges of loyalty. The diadem was
placed upon his brow, and the coronation ceremony was over. Israel had a
king by divine appointment. He who had waited patiently for the Lord,
beheld the promise of God fulfilled. "And David went on, and grew
great, and the Lord God of hosts was with him." 2 Samuel 5:10.
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