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Bible Overview should be a wonderful help
to all of you whether you are starting or continuing
your Bible study. Bible Overview features an examination
of a different book of the Bible each month (in
order) by Bible scholar and lecturer, Mary
Jane Chapin Chaignot. The only exceptions
to this pattern are in December, when we look
at Jesus' birth, and in April, when we study Jesus'
Triumphal Journey from Cross to Crown. If some
of you are deciding to read the Bible through
this year, you might want to check our archives
where you can find articles and information on
the books of the Bible as well as the characters
we've already reviewed on this website. The Bible
Time-Line in Teaching the Bible is also a quick
reference to a particular individual. We encourage
readers to share their Bible Study success stories
on this site. Email us at forum@biblewise.com
to be included on next month's site.
2 Samuel
This book continues the story begun in 1 Samuel.
It records how David became king of all Israel
after the death of Saul. The books of Kings,
which follow, will carry on the story through
to the exile. While Samuel was the main character
in the first book (hence its name), David will
dominate the pages of the second book of Samuel.
Some scholars maintain, however, that reading
2 Samuel without having a good knowledge
of 1 Samuel would be like starting to read
a novel in the middle and trying to figure it
all out on that basis. These two books are intricately
connected, not just because they bear the same
name and were undoubtedly one book in the beginning,
but also because of what they reveal about God.
The overall theme of 1 Samuel was to document
the transition of the people of Israel from a
loosely formed federation of tribes to a united
monarchy. It accomplished this through exciting
stories of battles, intrigue, and love. 2 Samuel
shows the sovereignty of God in establishing the
house of this monarchy. Good leaders are hard
to find. And even a good leader can embody the
qualities of good and evil. Both these books are
steeped in the tradition of the Deuteronomists,
who believed, simply stated, that the righteous
are blessed and the wicked are punished. This
simplistic theology undergirds the rise and fall
of the various characters. To their credit, the
authors paint a balanced picture of Israel's life
and their leaders, showing both positive and negative
incidents.
We will recall from 1 Samuel how the people
had begged for a king, to be "like all the
nations." Samuel, for one, felt this was
a bad idea. He saw this as turning away from the
foundations of loyalty to Yahweh. But then Yahweh
graciously gave the people what they wanted -
a king named Saul. Shortly into his reign, however,
Saul rejected Yahweh's rule and lost his kingship.
Some scholars think the cards had always been
stacked against him; nonetheless, "another"
was brought onto the scene, namely David. For
a while David served in Saul's court - in his
army. But as David's popularity soared, Saul became
jealous and David was forced to flee for his life.
When Saul and his sons were killed in battle,
David was the logical replacement. Yet, a careful
reader will notice that David's life was hardly
flawless. Interestingly, he was not rejected for
his wrongdoings. Indeed, Yahweh promised to establish
David's kingdom forever, and stated, "I will
be his father and he shall be my son." These
words of adoption did not give David license to
misbehave. To be sure, if David were to do wrong,
Yahweh declared that he would be chastised; but
Yahweh promised, "I shall not withdraw my
good-will from him as I withdrew it from Saul
"
In fact, David did many things wrong. David might
have been God's anointed, his adopted son, but
he is not held up as someone we should emulate.
David is not given to us for a moral example.
His misdeeds were probably recorded because they
were public knowledge. (In contrast, the author
of Chronicles judiciously avoids many of
David's missteps.) And while David's monarchy
was diminished after his affair with Bathsheba
and the arranged death of her husband, Yahweh
remained faithful to his word. Some scholars see
this as a glimpse of grace shining through the
Deuteronomist's mantra of crime and punishment.
Even in the face of evil, the message is, there
is hope for redemption. The authors do not address
why this was only offered to David and not to
Saul. Bear in mind, however, that the final shape
of this book occurred years after the fact; so
it might just be a historical tribute to the actual
events. Suffice it to say that within these pages,
many lessons can be learned.
First and foremost, the authors believed that
God was intimately involved in their lives and
in their community. They saw the hand of God in
all the events that occurred. These stories,
then, are told from the point of view of God being
present with them (albeit silently at times),
of having made a covenant with them, and of having
revealed himself to them. It's not that they constantly
refer to God. Indeed, many texts are very circumspect
about God's role. Generally, God only speaks to
and through his prophets. Yet, the stories have
to be read within this framework. Everything they
do, they do in relation to God. And ultimately,
though it seems like the leaders are making decisions
and dominating the action, in reality it is God
who determines the outcome.
There are four primary sections in 2 Samuel:
- The Question of Saul's Successor: 1:1-5:1-10
- David's reign: 5:11-8:18
- David's family: 9:1-20:26
- The Death of David: 21:1-24:25
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| 1:1-5:1-10 - The Question
of Saul's Successor |
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| 1:1-16 |
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The
news of Saul's death |
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| 1:17-27 |
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David
laments the death of Saul and Jonathan |
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| 2:1-4:12 |
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David's
rise to power begins |
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2:1-4a David
moves to Hebron - a central city, good for
a new
beginning
People
of Judah anoint David; other eleven tribes
do not know
this
2:4b-7 David
blesses Jabesh Gilead (northern city) for
burying Saul
2:8-11 One
of Saul's commanders (Abner) makes Saul's
son king
over Israel (First time Israel is used as
a name for northern
tribes)
David
is king of Judah for 7 years, six months
2:12-32 Battle between
David's servants and Saul's son's servants
Ultimately,
David's servants win battle
3:1-21 Abner
offers David a deal
Saul's
son (Ishbaal) is upset with Abner over a
power move
Abner
switches loyalties, delivers the north to
David
3:22-38 Joab, David's
general, believes Abner is a spy
Joab
kills Abner without David's knowledge
David
publicly repudiates Joab's actions
He
makes the murderers participate in a state
burial
The
people respond positively to David
4:1-12 Saul's
captains murder Ishbaal
They
bring Ishbaal's head to David
David
has the captains killed for killing an innocent
man
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| 5:1-5 |
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The
Elders of Israel Anoint David
This is David's third anointing
He's been king over Judah (southern territory)
for seven years already
He will now rule over the united kingdoms
for another 33 years |
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| 5:6-10 |
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David
chooses the city of Jerusalem
Jerusalem is between northern and southern
kingdoms
It is not ruled by either
Jerusalem will now be known as the "City
of David" |
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| 5:11-8:18 -
David's reign |
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| 5:11-16 |
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King
of Tyre (immediately to the north) sends trees
and masons to help David build a house "fit
for a king"
David has many wives and concubines - like
the other kings |
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| 5:17-25 |
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Philistines
don't share Israel's enthusiasm for David
Philistines were able to defeat Saul; now
go after David
The Lord tells David to "go up"
after them; they will be delivered unto him
Two battles take place; David is successful
in both
Philistine threat is over for the remainder
of 2 Samuel |
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| 6:1-23 |
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Back to the Ark of God
Suddenly David remembers the ark that embodies
the holy rule of Yahweh
David plans to bring the Ark of the Covenant
to Jerusalem
Bringing it to Jerusalem establishes his
kingdom under God's
authority
The move is accompanied by much dancing
and singing
Uzzah (one of the guards) unthinkingly touches
the ark
Uzzah immediately drops dead
David is afraid to bring it into Jerusalem,
gives it to the house of Obed-edom, where
it stays for 3 months
Obed-edom's house is blessed
Report of Obed-edom's blessings gets back
to David
Then, David brings the ark to Jerusalem
David sings and dances (worships)
His behavior is offensive to Michal (His
wife, but Saul's daughter)
Michal chastises David, is rendered barren
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| 7:1-29 |
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David's
prayer (Pivotal chapter for David's kingship)
Now that the ark is in Jerusalem, David thinks
he should build a sanctuary for it
Nathan (prophet) initially agrees
That night the Lord appears to Nathan - Change
of plans
The Lord announces that David's offspring
will build him his
house
In the meantime, the Lord will "build
David's house"
Promises to "establish David's kingship
forever"
David "sits" before God, thereby
placing his kingship before God
David has listened to Nathan; asks for God's
blessing
David gives up control, leaves the initiative
to God |
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| 8:1-14 |
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Fighting
resumes
David's campaigns are all successful, expands
Israel's borders on all sides
"The Lord gave the victory to David wherever
he went." (8:6, 14) |
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| 8:15-18 |
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Administrative
appointments
David spends as much time on maintaining peace
as he does on war
Treats his people with care and justice |
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| 9:1-20:26
- David's family |
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| 9:1-13 |
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Saul's
son Mephibosheth is brought to David
David inquires on whereabouts of any of Saul's
remaining sons
Wants to show kindness in memory of Jonathan
Attempts to unite remaining Saulide loyalists
Mephibosheth was lame, one of Saul's sons
He is brought to David with fear and trepidation
David welcomes him to his table
Lives in Jerusalem with full dignity |
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| 10:1-19 |
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The
fighting resumes
David sends envoys to the new Ammon king following
the death of his father
His intention is to console him over the loss
of his father
The new king feels threatened, seizes the
envoys
Needless to say, war breaks out between the
two nations
The Ammonites bring in the Arameans to help
David subdues the Arameans, makes them subject
to Israel
Battle is over, but Ammonites remain a threat |
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| 11:1-12:31 |
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David
and Bathsheba
Joab is off fighting the Ammonites; David
stays behind in Jerusalem
David sees Bathsheba
David sends messengers to "get her"
.
And he "lay with her"
Bathsheba becomes pregnant
Bathsheba's husband, Uriah the Hittite, is
called home
David tells him to go to Bathsheba
Uriah stays the night with his soldiers
David sends Uriah into battle, orders Joab
to make sure he is
killed
Bathsheba mourns Uriah. When the mourning
time is over, she goes to live with David,
and "bore him a son" |
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11:27b-12:15a Nathan
speaks to David
Yahweh
instructs Nathan
Nathan
tells a parable about a man with a pet lamb
David
is outraged at the rich man who takes the
pet
lamb
Nathan
tells him, "You are the man"
David
acknowledges his sin, is told BY WHOM? "I
will
raise up trouble against you from within
your house"
Nathan
pronounces forgiveness upon David
12:15b-25 David
and Bathsheba's son is born
The
child is ill; David prays for seven days,
but the child
dies
David
rises, worships, and consoles Bathsheba
David
and Bathsheba have two more sons: Solomon
and Jedidiah
12:26-31 The
Ammonites are defeated
The
war has been raging while all these events
transpire
in Jerusalem
Joab
has been handling the war.
When
victory is certain, he calls for David
David
finishes the campaign and claims the spoils
of war
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| 13-20 |
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Family
troubles - "I will raise up trouble against
you
."
David has three sons older than Solomon (the
intended heir)
Ultimately all three must be disqualified
to open the way for Solomon |
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13:1-22 The
rape of Tamar
David's
son, Ammon, lusts after his half sister,
Tamar
A
cousin, Jonadab, comes up with a plan
Ammon
feigns sickness; Tamar is brought in to
care
for
him
Ammon
forces himself upon her
then hates
her and throws
her out
Tamar
mourns loudly and publicly
Her
full brother, Absalom, takes her home
David
finds out, but does nothing because he "loves"
Ammon
13:23-38 Absalom
kills Ammon
Two
full years pass
Absalom
holds a sheep shearing celebration
Ammon
is invited and when he is drunk, Absalom's
men kill
him
Absalom
flees across the border
He
spends the next three years in exile
David
mourns his son, Absalom
14:1-33 Absalom
returns
Joab
sees David's pending change of heart re:
Absalom
Puts
a plan in motion through a "wise woman"
She
poses as a widow with two sons, one of whom
killed
the other
People
are now insisting the remaining son be killed
David
sees the injustice in this, doesn't yet
realize it's about
him
Promises
to protect the remaining son
Then
he gets it; sends Joab to get Absalom
But
David refuses to see him
Restoration
of the family does not occur
After
two years, Absalom presses the matter with
Joab
Insists
on being taken to the king regardless of
outcome
David
"kisses" Absalom
But
by now, Absalom is less of a "son"
and more of a "rival"
for David
15:1-12 Absalom
steals the hearts of the people
King
David is somewhat remiss in dealing with
concerns
of the people
Absalom
is ready to take charge
After
spending four years in Jerusalem, Absalom
offers to
return to the holy city of Hebron for a
religious banquet
Arranges
a coup against David
Sends
messengers proclaiming, "Absalom is
king"
15:13-16:14 David
flees
David
is told about Absalom
Escapes
out of Jerusalem with only a few servants
and
a bodyguard
Along
the way David's needs are met by foreigners,
priests,
and servants
Story
is very personal; not everyone is happy
to
see
David
David
learns from this experience, listens to
God
Escapes
to the Jordan
16:15-17:14 Absalom
and his Counselors
Absalom
returns to Jerusalem
One
of David's advisors (Hushai) offers his
services to
Absalom
Eventually
Absalom trusts him, but he's spying for
David
Absalom
seeks the advice of two counselors (Hushai
is one of them)
One
tells him to sleep with his father's concubines
(transfer
of power)Sexual relations with the concubines
of a king establish a claim on the kingdom
Absalom
complies "in the sight of all Israel"
Next
the counselor advises that he should immediately
track and kill David
The
other reminds Absalom that David will be
hard to
kill
Tells
Absalom he must go after David himself -
with all
Israel to help him
Choosing
this approach delays the matter since they
must wait for the troops to gather
Absalom
chooses the second (offered by Hushai)
17:15-22 Hushai's
loyalty to David
Hushai
sends word to David re: Absalom's plans
David
moves his men to the other side of the Jordan
17:23 First
counselor hangs himself
17:24-18:18 David's
army defeats Absalom
David
has time to get his troops in order, feed
them, add
to their ranks
Is
restrained by his own troops from leading
the battle
Tells
his commanders to "deal gently with
"Absalom"
Absalom's
hair gets caught in trees
He
is left hanging, helpless and is quickly
killed by Joab
His
hair was source of great pride; now reason
for his
death
No
state burial here; Absalom's body is thrown
on
a
pile
18:19-33 David
mourns the loss of Absalom
Commanders
think telling David the bad news will be
tricky
Send
an outsider, a Cushite
A
friend of David also volunteers
The
friend gets there first, tells David the
battle
is
over
The
Cushite tells David Absalom is dead, but
gives no
details
Despite
Absalom's coup, David mourns his son
"Would
I had died instead of you"
19:1-43 David
returns to Jerusalem
Alongside
David, all the troops "mourn"
for Absalom
(somber victory)
Country
is confused, too - who really is king?
Absalom
was young, vibrant; David is "old,"
maybe too
old
Anti
and pro-David factions are active
David
is roused from his mourning to deal with
his kingship
Enlists
help of trusted priests to convince the
elders
to embrace David
Hires
Absalom's commander, replaces Joab
Intended
both to punish Joab for Absalom's death,
attract
Absalom loyalists back to David
Tide
turns when anti-David forces come to repent
David
forgives them, shows he is king of all,
not just
his followers
Saul's
son, Mephibosheth, pledges his loyalty
Meeting
with Barzilla along the road
David
offers Barzilla a life of ease in the palace
Barzilla
declines, but blesses him (and vice versa),
sends
his son
Barzilla
symbolically frees David from obligations
of hospitality
Also
indicates alliance with north
Should
have settled things, but immediately following,
bickering starts anew
There
is a rupture between northern and southern
factions
Northerners
don't want to be second-class citizens
20:1-26 Another
revolt (Sheba, a Benjamite)
Sheba,
a northerner of the tribe of Saul, leads
a revolt
against David
David
returns to Jerusalem
Dismantles
his harem, the ones humiliated by Absalom
Perhaps
he has learned his real authority is
God-derived
Sends
his new commander after Sheba
The
commander dawdles, Joab returns to the scene
and kills him
Joab
pursues Sheba to the city of Abel
Besieges
the city; a wise woman offers a deal
She
will give up Sheba if Joab withdraws from
the city
Both
keep their words
Joab
is back in his old job, commander of David's
army
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| 21:1-24:25 -
The Death of David |
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| 21:1-14 |
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Famine
in the Land
There is a three-year famine
David prays for guidance
Is told that famine is consequence of Saul's
evil acts against Gibeonites
David asks the Gibeonites what he should do
They think ritual sacrifice of Saul's seven
sons will solve the
famine
David does what they ask
Two of the sons were of Rizpah
She publicly mourns them, watches over their
bodies
David hears about her, repents, orders that
all the bodies (including Saul's and Jonathan's)
be properly buried
Then the famine ends
Rizpah brings David to his theological senses
God doesn't require human sacrifices; God
requires human
mercy |
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| 21:15-22 |
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David's
warriors
Another battle looms with the Philistines
David's men are highlighted as big, fierce,
and courageous |
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| 22:1-51 |
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David's
prayer
Words are from Psalm 18 (or vice versa)
Summary of David's life
"The Lord is my rock
fortress
deliverer
.shield
salvation
God is the one who empowers David
He recalls God's saving acts, his mercy towards
David
He declares his descendants will inherit God's
promises |
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| 23:1-7 |
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David's
last words
Celebrates being chosen by God
Celebrates his lifework
Affirms his legacy - its everlasting covenant |
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| 23:8-39 |
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Pays
tribute to his warriors
Last on the list - Uriah, the Hittite
Thirty-seven in all |
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| 24:1-25 |
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The
establishment of the Jerusalemite Cult
David is told to take a census of the north
and south
He does this, but realizes it was wrong as
soon as it is complete
He is offered his choice of punishment
Chooses pestilence
Many people die
David confesses his sin; takes full responsibility
Before the pestilence reaches Jerusalem, David
is able to stop the "angel of the Lord
on the threshing floor of Arunah the Jebusite."
Scholars believe this to be the site of the
Temple that Solomon would build
Story shows David laying the foundation for
the Temple
David pays Arunah for the land |
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The book of Samuel ends
with a difficult story, but one that highlights
David in all his humanity. David's mistakes are
not ignored or excused, and sometimes they have
grave consequences. Nonetheless, David is remembered
as Israel's greatest king. Despite his failures,
he had many successes. Perhaps the greatest lesson
is to realize that people can be of use to God amidst
all their strengths and weaknesses. Out of this
unholy place and time (with its sexual mores and
warring traditions) God was able to form a holy
people. God's work continues uninterrupted despite
the ways of the world. The story, however, is far
from finished. Next month we will begin to explore
the world of the Kings through to their end. As
always, God's presence is presumed. The books are
inherently theological and offer an explanation
for the demise of the Israelite kingdoms. |
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Bibliography
Alter, Robert and Frank Kermode. The Literary
Guide to the Bible. Cambridge, MA: Belknap
Press. 1987.
Brueggeman, Walter. "1 & 2 Samuel."
Interpretation. Louisville, KY: Westminster
John Knox Press,
1990.
Buttrick George, ed. Interpreter's Bible.
New York, Abingdon-Cokesbury Press, 1953.
Dummelow, J.R. A Commentary on the Holy Bible.
New York: MacMillan Publishing,
1977.
Evans, Mary. "1 and 2 Samuel." New
International Biblical Commentary. Peabody,
MA: Hendrickson
Publishers, 2000.
Mills, Watson and Richard Wilson. Mercer Commentary
on the Bible. Macon, GA: Mercer
University Press, 1995
Payne, David. "I & II Samuel."
The Daily Study Bible Series. Philadelphia,
PA: Westminster
Press, 1982.
Peterson, Eugene. "First and Second Samuel."
The Westminster Bible Companion.
Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1999.
Robinson, Gnana. "1 & 2 Samuel, Let
Us Be Like the Nations." The International
Theological Commentary.
Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1993.
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