2 Sam. 20-21: “The Revolt Of
By
1. INTRO:
1.1.
In our last study, we looked at chapters 18 and 19.
1.1.1. We saw that when David and
his men went into battle against Absalom and his forces that Absalom was killed
in battle.
1.1.2. We saw then the process that
occurred as David was accepted back to
1.2.
In our study today, we are going to look at chapters 20 and 21.
1.2.1. We are nearing the very end
of the reign of King David. We are
winding down and learning about the events that marked his life as he was now
an old man and losing his strength.
1.2.2. Even in his old age, David
is still suffering the consequences of his sins for the sword has not departed
from his house (2 Sam. 12:10) and he faces yet another revolt to take over the
kingdom from him.
1.2.3. In chapter 20, another
rebellion to take over the kingdom breaks out as a man named
1.2.4. In chapter 21, there is a
flashback to the early part of the reign of David when the nation of
2. VS 20:1-2 - “1 Now a worthless
fellow happened to be there whose name was Sheba, the son of Bichri, a
Benjamite; and he blew the trumpet and said, “We have no portion in David, Nor
do we have inheritance in the son of Jesse; Every man to his tents, O Israel!” 2
So all the men of
2.1.
We saw in our last study that contention had arisen when David returned
to reign as king after Absalom, the son of David, was killed and his rebellion
squashed. At that time, the 10 tribes of
2.2.
The scripture tells us in Prov. 15:1 a very important principle which
we are wise to live by, “1 A gentle answer turns away wrath, But
a harsh word stirs up anger.” The men of
2.3.
We discussed in that last study also that if Israel was so glad to have
David back as their king then why should they worry about who brought him
back? Now, we find out where the hearts
and motivations of
2.4.
The Israelites are a living example of the fickleness of men in
general.
2.4.1. How many people have we seen
in our day come into the church and confess that they have committed their
lives to Christ and they love Him and are living their life for Him, and yet
when some trials or temptations come their way instead of persevering in their
faith and looking to the Lord for strength and help they leave the fellowship
of believers and begin to live a life compromising with sin, Satan, and the
world?
2.5.
2.6.
It is nice here to see
2.7.
So, David has more difficulties in his life now as yet another revolt
against his throne comes about. Is it
not always true in our lives as Christians that not too long of a time passes
before we run into difficulties and trials at the hand of the Lord. Mark Twain once said, “Life is just one
darned thing after another.”
3. VS 20:3 - “3 Then David came to
his house at Jerusalem, and the king took the ten women, the concubines whom he
had left to keep the house, and placed them under guard and provided them with
sustenance, but did not go in to them. So they were shut up until the day of
their death, living as widows.” - David
placed his 10 concubines under guard and provided sustenance for them, yet he
never had relations with them again
3.1.
During his insurrection, Absalom, David’s son, had at the counsel of
Ahithophel and in the sight of all
4. VS 20:4-10 - “
4 Then the king said to Amasa, “Call out the men of
4.1.
We saw in our last study that Amasa was David’s nephew (1 Chron.
2:17). Yet, he had been the general that
Absalom, David’s son, had chosen to lead his army after Absalom had created the
insurrection to take the throne away from his father.
4.2.
Amasa though was not nearly the fighting man and general of Joab, the
man who had previously been placed over all of David’s army. Not only this but he has problems getting an
army called together within a given and realistic timeframe.
4.3.
We looked in our last study at how over time that Joab had become
bitter towards David and had ceased to carry out David’s wishes as king, and
instead was living for himself and his own agenda. Joab needed to be replaced, however because
of the popularity and power base of Joab, David had no easy way to replace
him. But, when David had appealed to
4.4.
Remember, Joab was also a nephew of David’s. Joab was the son of Zeruiah, David’s half
sister (2 Sam. 2:18). Joab and Amasa
were cousins therefore.
4.5.
The treachery and brutality of Joab is stunning. He is a man who neither feared God or
man. When he sees Amasa, Joab feigns
showing that kind of filial love common in the middle east at this time by
pulling on cousin Amasa’s beard and kissing Amasa’s cheek, however he just uses this opportunity to grab
the small sword attached to his waist and to stab Amasa in the gut and spill
out his innards on the ground.
4.6.
We see here also that though Abishai is commissioned by David to get
some men together to go after Sheba that it is Joab and the Cherethites and the
Pelethites all of the mighty men that pursue Sheba.
5. VS 20:11-13 - “11 Now there stood by
him one of Joab’s young men, and said, “Whoever favors Joab and whoever is for
David, let him follow Joab.” 12 But Amasa lay wallowing in his
blood in the middle of the highway. And when the man saw that all the
people stood still, he removed Amasa from the highway into the field and threw
a garment over him when he saw that everyone who came by him stood still. 13
As soon as he was removed from the highway, all the men passed on after
Joab to pursue
5.1.
The men are stunned to see Joab murder general Amasa in cold blood
before them, especially in light of the fact that David had appointed Amasa as
his general and commissioned Amasa to assemble an army to fight against
5.2.
One of ‘Joab’s young men’ uses psychology on all of the men
telling them that if they favor David and Joab then they must now follow Joab
as he goes into battle against Sheba. I
think that if David had seen Joab murder Amasa he would have looked at things
from a much different perspective than what this young man of Joab’s proposes.
5.3.
All of the men though are paralyzed and cannot leave and go into battle
as they see Amasa wallowing in his blood.
Seeing this, this young man of Joab’s drags Amasa’s body off of the
highway. Then, the men follow Joab and
pursue Amasa.
5.4.
Note here that by being murdered Amasa received the consequence for his
sins in siding with Absalom in his previous insurrection attempt against King
David. The Lord is always working in our
world providentially as He is behind all of the scenes in our world and in our
lives, even when the wicked triumph momentarily.
6. VS 20:16-22 - “14 Now he went
through all the tribes of
6.1.
This wise woman from the city of
6.2.
Joab then tells the woman that he does not desire to swallow up or
destroy the people of the city but is just chasing a bad man who has lifted up
his hands against King David, Sheba. The
woman tells Joab that they will throw the man’s head over the wall of the city,
which they do, ending the seige.
6.3.
When
7. VS 20:23-26 - “23 Now Joab was over
the whole army of Israel, and Benaiah the son of Jehoiada was over the
Cherethites and the Pelethites; 24 and Adoram was over the forced
labor, and Jehoshaphat the son of Ahilud was the recorder; 25 and
Sheva was scribe, and Zadok and Abiathar were priests; 26 and Ira
the Jairite was also a priest to David.” - The
officers in the newly re-established
7.1.
Notice that because Joab killed Amasa he again is over the entire army
of
8. VS 21:1-9 - “1 Now there was a
famine in the days of David for three years, year after year; and David sought
the presence of the Lord. And the Lord said, “It is for Saul and his
bloody house, because he put the Gibeonites to death.” 2 So the king
called the Gibeonites and spoke to them (now the Gibeonites were not of the
sons of
8.1.
In Joshua chapter 9 we read the story of how after the battles of
Jericho and Ai that a group came to Joshua disguised as weary travelers from a
long journey who had come because they had heard about the great things that
Joshua had done and they wanted to honor him and make a covenant of peace with
him. Joshua was taken in by the deceit
of the Gibeonites and made a covenant of peace with them. However, he later learned that the Gibeonites
don’t live far away but rather are near neighbors in the
8.2.
It appears that the events of this story actually occurred early during
the reign of David, not after the late date that the events in chapter 20
occured.
8.3.
Even though we have no account in the scriptures of this event, we
learn here that Saul sometime during his reign attacked the unarmed and
trusting Gibeonites and killed many of them.
Saul had been commissioned to go and to fight the Philistines, however
he balked at this command, however now we find out that Saul went and killed
those whom the Lord had not commissioned him to kill, the Gibeonites. Perhaps because the Gibeonites were so
vulnerable Saul killed them just because he could do it plus he knew that he
was supposed to go and attack someone.
Breaking
8.4.
There are a couple of spiritual principles revealed in God’s word that
these verses reinforce to us :
8.4.1. The Lord does in fact judge
nations and hold nations accountable for their actions.
8.4.1.1. The Old Testament books of
the major and minor prophets reveal judgment after judgment that is leveled
against the nations of the world because of their sins in turning away from the
Lord as well as their persecution of God’s people.
8.4.1.2. Michael Schluter in a paper
he has written says, “God judges nations within time, just as he judges
individuals outside time.” In the
same article he also quotes
8.4.1.3. J. Vernon McGee wrote, “God
does deal with nations; he does judge
nations. God holds nations
responsible—it does not make any difference what nation it is. God judged
8.4.1.4. I believe that the problem
that America currently has with terrorists as well as the “9/11” attack has
come about because of the Lord judging America because we as a nation have been
moving farther and farther away from being a Christian nation and honoring God
as a nation. Since we have taken God out
of our constitution and our government, it is no wonder that God allows us to
suffer judgment as a nation. We as a
nation make it legal to kill babies, we live in extreme materialism, we make it
illegal for kids to pray in schools, etc., etc., etc. Should we not expect that
God should judge
8.4.2. God does not forget about
our sins, that is, until we confess and repent of them.
8.4.2.1. Interestingly, even though
8.4.2.2. We Christians need to
realize that though we may go on in our life after committing sins thinking
that everything is going to be alright and we are going to have the Lord’s
blessing, that until we repent of those sins and have them covered in the blood
of Jesus that we too are going to be hindered from having the Lord’s blessing
in our lives. We must apply 1 John 1:9
to our sins whenever we realize that we have committed them : confess, repent, and then His blood will
cover our transgressions and cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
8.5.
As the sin of one man, Achan, had caused the nation of Israel to be
defeated at Ai, when in the book of Joshua they were conquering the land of
Canaan, so also here the sin of Saul has brought difficulty in the form of
famine upon the entire nation. Just one
person can cause the chastening hand of the Lord to fall upon His people.
8.6.
As with Saul, there is much misguided zeal for the Lord in our day
today. Horrible atrocities throughout
history have been done in the Name of the Lord.
Today, those claiming to be Christians are often involved in causes and
actions that the Lord has not called or commanded them to do. Churches often get caught up in many things
that have nothing to do with what the scriptures tell us we have been
commissioned to do. We in the church
have the responsibility of keeping the “main thing” the “main thing” in the
church. The gospel of Jesus’ death and
resurrection and preaching this gospel to all nations making disciples of them
is what our function in this world is to be.
8.7.
After 3 years of famine David finally came to recognize that the famine
was coming about from the hand of the Lord because of
8.7.1. For us as Christians, it is
so often the case that when we finally come to the Lord in prayer and
contrition for help concerning our difficulties that it is after we have
endured huge and needless suffering. The
hymn that we sing tells it just like it is for us, “Oh, what peace we often
forfeit, oh what needless pain we bear, all because we do not carry everything
to God in prayer.”
8.7.2. It is a very wise thing for
us as God’s people to realize that we need to “seek the Lord early in our
crises,” for if we do this we will save ourselves much suffering and
difficulty.
8.8.
The word for ‘son’ in these verses can refer in the scriptures
to sons, grandsons, or even great grandsons.
It was the grandsons and great grandsons of Saul who were slain because
of the murder of the Gibeonites.
8.9.
The Old Testament prohibited the
punishing a son for the sins of his father (Deut. 24:16; 2 Kings 14:6; Ezek.
18:1-4, 14-17), however it is intimated here by the house being called a
“bloody house” that these grandsons of Saul were possibly involved in the
murder of the Gibeonites.
8.10.
The Hebrew word used in 21:6 for ‘hang’ actually means “to
expose a dead body to public view.”
Thus, it appears that these men were executed in some sort of a way such
a way as to expose their dead bodies to continual public humiliation.
8.11.
Because of David’s commitment to Jonathan, Saul’s son who was David’s
ally and who was killed in battle along with Saul, David spares Mephibosheth’s
life, as Mephibosheth was Jonathan’s son whom David had invited to come and
live with David in his palace and eat at the king’s table. Another Mephibosheth is however among these 7
men who are executed.
8.12.
The Gibeonites reveal their noble character in
several ways in our story :
8.12.1.
They did not get the attention of King David to
carry out justice on their behalf by lobbying him. Rather they quietly waited upon the Lord to
bring about His vengeance, which He eventually did by bringing about a famine
to get the king’s attention.
8.12.1.1. Rom. 12:19 tells us to never
take our own revenge but to leave room for the wrath of God, “19 Never
take your own revenge, beloved, but leave room for the wrath of God, for
it is written, “Vengeance is Mine,
I will repay,” says the Lord.”
8.12.2.
They could have asked for huge financial
compensation, but they do not. Instead
they only require a small emblem of justice for the wrong done to them.
8.12.2.1. The scriptures tell us as
Christians that we are not to be suing our brothers and sisters in the legal
courts but to take matters before the church and let the church leaders make
decisions in our cases when we feel we have been wronged. However, today we are living in a greedy “sue
happy” world and even Christians often sue each other, however these actions by
Christians are a blight upon the church.
8.12.2.1.1. 1 Cor. 6:1-8 exhorts us in
regard to suing brothers and sisters in Christ, “1 Does any one
of you, when he has a case against his neighbor, dare to go to law before the
unrighteous and not before the saints? 2 Or do you not know that the
saints will judge the world? If the world is judged by you, are you not
competent to constitute the smallest law courts? 3 Do you not
know that we will judge angels? How much more matters of this life? 4 So
if you have law courts dealing with matters of this life, do you appoint them
as judges who are of no account in the church? 5 I say this to
your shame. Is it so, that there is not among you one wise man
who will be able to decide between his brethren, 6 but brother goes
to law with brother, and that before unbelievers? 7 Actually, then,
it is already a defeat for you, that you have lawsuits with one another. Why
not rather be wronged? Why not rather be defrauded? 8 On the
contrary, you yourselves wrong and defraud. You do this even to your brethren.”
8.12.3.
They require that only 7 men should suffer for the
many killed at the hands of Saul. Perhaps
they also realized from the scriptures that 7 was the number for perfection and
thus they determined that 7 men could suffer and bring about the justice due
them.
9. VS 21:10-14 - “10 And Rizpah the
daughter of Aiah took sackcloth and spread it for herself on the rock, from the
beginning of harvest until it rained on them from the sky; and she allowed
neither the birds of the sky to rest on them by day nor the beasts of the field
by night. 11 When it was told David what Rizpah the daughter of
Aiah, the concubine of Saul, had done, 12 then David went and took
the bones of Saul and the bones of Jonathan his son from the men of
Jabesh-gilead, who had stolen them from the open square of Beth-shan, where the
Philistines had hanged them on the day the Philistines struck down Saul in
Gilboa. 13 He brought up the bones of Saul and the bones of Jonathan
his son from there, and they gathered the bones of those who had been hanged. 14
They buried the bones of Saul and Jonathan his son in the country of
Benjamin in Zela, in the grave of Kish his father; thus they did all that the
king commanded, and after that God was moved by prayer for the land.” - The mother of two of the young men who were
hanged stays with the exposed bodies of the 7 young men, protecting them, until
the fall rains began
9.1.
In the Old Testament dead bodies were to be buried on the same day as
their execution (Deut. 21:22-23), however in this case evidently the justice of
God required that the bodies of these men remained exposed in public sight from
the barley harvest in April until the early rains of October. At least we know that this is what the
Gibeonites thought would be ample punishment and the Lord had withheld His hand
of blessing on the nation until justice was served on the house of Saul.
9.2.
Rizpah, the mother of two of the young men who were hung for the murder
of the Gibeonites stays consistently there with the bodies of the 7 men keeping
predators away from them. This went on
for 6 months or more.
9.3.
When David hears that Rizpah has kept a vigil up with the bodies of the
7 young men for 6 months he arranges for the bodies as well as the bones of
Saul and Jonathan to have a proper burial in the grave of Kish, Saul’s father.
9.4.
Note here that after the bodies were properly buried that the Lord
relented of the famine from the land and again heard the prayers of
10.
VS 21:15-17 - “15
Now when the Philistines were at war again with
10.1.
The fighting career of David, the courageous warrior of the Lord, has
now ended.
10.2.
In this battle we see that David in his old age has now lost his
natural strength and stamina and is almost killed in battle simply because he
could not sustain the energy and strength required. David’s life is saved by Abishai.
10.3.
After this battle, the men of David disallow David from again going out
to fight in battle with the army.
11.
VS 21:18-22 - “18
Now it came about after this that there was war again with the
Philistines at Gob; then Sibbecai the Hushathite struck down Saph, who was
among the descendants of the giant. 19 There was war with the
Philistines again at Gob, and Elhanan the son of Jaare-oregim the Bethlehemite
killed Goliath the Gittite, the shaft of whose spear was like a weaver’s beam. 20
There was war at
11.1.
This is the story of how the four sons of Goliath, the Philistine giant
killed by David when he was just a young lad, were killed by the fighting men
of
11.2.
Don’t expect trials to dissipate in your later years. Here we see that some of David’s fiercest
enemies are finally conquered towards the end of his reign: the four sons of Goliath the Philistine giant
David slew as a youth.
11.3.
When David had gone up to fight against Goliath he had placed 5 smooth
stones in his bag and then he slew the giant with one of them. Commentators sometimes mention that David had
those other four stones as spares in case he missed with the first stone. However, it is possible he planned on getting
a stone to kill Goliath and then his four sons who would possibly pursue David
after he killed their father.
12.
CONCLUSIONS :
12.1.
As we consider the events in our study today, especially those
regarding the 3 year famine in the land caused by the sin of Saul against the
Gibeonites, we need to remember some things :
12.1.1.
Take everything in your life to the Lord in prayer : Phil. 4:6-7, “6 Be anxious for
nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let
your requests be made known to God. 7 And the peace of God, which
surpasses all comprehension, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ
Jesus.”
12.1.2.
Seek the Lord early in your crises ( don’t wait for 3 years like David
).
12.1.3.
Confess and repent whenever you realize that you have violated God’s
commands. Keep short accounts with God (
IOW don’t wait for a 3 year famine to get things right with God ).
12.1.4.
Realize the Lord’s hand in all that happens in your life working behind
the scenes ( even though you won’t necessarily understand why everything
happens to you ).