Chapter 24 - Shaul in the cave
The
Book of Shmuel
Lecture
46: Chapter 24
Shaul
in the cave
Rav
Amnon Bazak
I.
INTRODUCTION
We
concluded the previous chapter with Shaul's dramatic pursuit of David, a pursuit
that was interrupted when a messenger arrived and informed Shaul that the
Pelishtim had invaded the country.
Our chapter opens with the following account:
And
it came to pass, when Shaul returned from following the Pelishtim, that it was
told to him, saying, "Behold, David is in the wilderness of
Ein-Gedi."
Scripture does not tell us what happened in the confrontation between
Shaul and the Pelishtim. Did Shaul
emerge victorious? Did the Pelishtim bring their invasion to a halt? Or perhaps
Shaul failed to drive them out of the country. Scripture does not provide us with any
answers to these questions, and this is not by chance. In this way, Scripture emphasizes that
from Shaul's perspective the struggle with the Pelishtim was merely an annoyance
that cut short his pursuit of David.
It may, however, be said to Shaul's credit that when push came to shove,
he fulfilled the responsibility that fell on his shoulders and directed his
efforts against the Pelishtim.
Nevertheless, we are left with the impression that his main interest was
and remains the pursuit of David.
This is also evident from the account of whom Shaul chooses for the
purpose of pursuing David:
(2)
Then Shaul took three thousand chosen men out of all Israel, and went to
seek David and his men upon the rocks of the wild goats.
It is difficult to ignore the similarity between this verse and the
description of Shaul's men in his first battle against the
Pelishtim:
And
Saul chose him three thousand men of Israel
(13:2)
The same efforts that Shaul invested in his fight against the Pelishtim
at the beginning of his career as king of Israel are now invested in his pursuit
after David. This gives us an
indication of Shaul's priorities and what he thinks is his primary
mission.
II.
"BEHOLD THE DAY IN WHICH THE LORD HAS SAID UNTO
YOU"
Shaul, however, cannot overturn God's decree, and so his pursuit of David
turns into an exceedingly embarrassing event for him:
(3)
And he came to the sheepcotes by the way, where there was a cave; and Shaul went
in to cover his feet.[1]
Now David and his men were sitting in the innermost parts of the
cave.
Shaul enters into a dark cave and fails to notice David and his men, who
are found deep inside, whereas they recognize him immediately. This situation provides David's men with
a clear advantage over Shaul, who proceeds to relieve himself totally unaware of
the danger in which he is found.
David's men very quickly understand what has happened and propose that he
exploit the situation:
(4)
And the men of David said unto him, "Behold the day in which the Lord has said
unto you, 'Behold, I will deliver your enemy into your hand,' and you shall do
to him as it shall seem good unto you."
The words sounded by David's men imply that they were aware of a prophecy
stating that God would deliver David's enemies into his hands. The problem is that no such prophecy has
yet been mentioned. The Radak
suggests that David received a general prophecy that God would deliver his
enemies into his hands. Clearly,
however, there was no specific reference to Shaul, for in the end, Shaul did not
fall into David's hands.
Alternatively, we may suggest that David never received even a general
prophecy of the sort suggested by the Radak, but since David's men knew that
Shmuel had anointed him king and that David would not be able to ascend to the
throne before Shaul dies, they interpreted the prophecy about David's anointing
as a prophecy that Shaul would fall into David's hands.
In any case, the interpretation offered by David's men to the prophecy
about his success was exceedingly broad, and this attests to the problematic
aspects of these bitter-spirited people.[2]
As long as David is able to evade Shaul, there is no justification in his
hurting him, especially in light of the fact that he is the lawful monarch. David is faced with a difficult test:
Will he succumb to his men's proposal, or will he succeed in keeping them under
control?
Then
David arose, and cut off the skirt of Shaul's robe privily. (5) And it came to pass afterward, that
David's heart smote him, because he had cut off Shaul's skirt. (6) And he said unto his men, "The Lord
forbid it me, that I should do this thing unto my lord, the Lord's anointed, to
put forth my hand against him, seeing he is the Lord's anointed."[3]
(7) So David checked his men with these words, and suffered them not to rise
against Shaul. And Shaul rose up
out of the cave, and went on his way.
The order of events is very odd.
One might have expected David's words to his men in verse 6 to appear
immediately after their own words and as a response to them. Why, then, are they recorded only after
David cuts off the skirt of Shaul's robe? The Ralbag has a surprising comment on
this matter:
It
is possible, according to the plain sense of the text, that David had already
wanted to kill him, but he only reached the skirt. Afterwards David regretted his plan,
even though he was permitted to kill him inasmuch as [Shaul] fell into the
category of a rodef (a pursuer).
[David] then said: "The Lord forbid it me, that I should do this thing
unto my lord." This was because of his excessive piety.
According to the Ralbag, David was indeed convinced by his men, and he
rose up to kill Shaul. Moreover,
the Ralbag argues that had David killed Shaul, he would have been justified in
doing so, for Shaul had the status of a rodef. In actuality, however, David failed to
kill Shaul, and managed only to cut off the skirt of his robe. At that point, he had regrets about his
decision to kill Shaul owing to his great piety.[4]
The Ralbag's position appears to be rather extreme, for there is no hint
in Scripture that David had actually intended to harm Shaul. But his underlying approach can be
accepted in a more moderate form.
Without a doubt, David regretted his cutting off the skirt of Shaul's
robe. It is also reasonable to
assume that David had performed that act under the influence of his men's
words. At no stage, however, did
David intend to hurt Shaul himself, and therefore he did not respond to his
men's call to strike at Shaul, but merely rose up against him and cut off the
skirt of his robe. Only afterwards
did David regret even this, which also involved insult and scorn for
Shaul.[5]
After coming to regret his action, David girded strength and in a determined
fashion stood up to his men, clarifying that he must not raise his hand against
the Lord's anointed. It would seem
that David's men were not satisfied, and they tried to rise up and strike at
Shaul themselves, but once again David managed to gain control and prevent them
from carrying out their plan.
David did in fact demonstrate great piety, as argued by the Ralbag, for
Shaul had done everything in his power to kill David, whereas David suffered
pangs of guilt regarding his almost trivial act cutting off the skirt of
Shaul's robe. It seems, however,
that it was precisely this act that had special significance, for even if this
was not David's intention, it was nevertheless a strike against Shaul, as we
shall see immediately.
III.
SHAUL'S GARMENTS
An examination of the previous chapters teaches us about the significance
of the motif of garments with respect to Shaul. In chapter 15 (lecture no. 29), we noted what happened immediately
following the war against Amalek:
And
as Shmuel turned about to go away, he laid hold upon the skirt of his robe, and
it rent. And Shmuel said unto him,
"The Lord has rent the kingdom of Israel from you this day, and has given it to
a neighbor of yours, who is better than you." (vv. 27-28)
We saw there that while, according to the plain sense of the text, it is
more reasonable to assume that it was Shaul who seized the skirt of Shmuel's
robe, Scripture's wording allows for the understanding that it was Shaul's robe
that was rent. According to this
understanding, greater emphasis is given to what Shmuel says to Shaul: "The Lord
has rent the kingdom of Israel from you this day, and has given it to a neighbor
of yours, that is better than you." It turns out, then, that even if David did
not have this explicitly in mind, an additional rending of Shaul's garment and
especially by David, whom Shaul rightfully suspects is that "neighbor of yours,
who is better than you" had great symbolic meaning.
This was given further expression during the war against Golyat, when
Shaul thought to send David out clothed in his own fighting gear: "And Shaul
clad David with his apparel" (17:38).
This act gave additional symbolic expression to the passing of the
kingship from Shaul to David. In
the end, David refused to wear Shaul's clothing, and this, too, may have
symbolic meaning; the time had not yet come for David to rule as king over
Israel. From Shaul's perspective,
however, this step had meaning, which only deepened at a later occasion, when
Shaul pursued David while he was with Shmuel: "And he also stripped off his
clothes, and he also prophesied before Shmuel, and lay down naked all that day
and all that night" (19:24).
Without a doubt, David was not aware of all the symbolic meaning attached
to Shaul's garments. Nevertheless,
it is clear from these stories the extent to which there is symbolic meaning to
clothing in general,[6]
and to the clothing of high officeholders in particular, and it is clear that
David was also aware of this meaning.
It is for this reason that David felt uncomfortable about his action,
which symbolized the imminent end of Shaul's kingdom.
IV. "THE LORD
JUDGE BETWEEN ME AND YOU"
All that was said above notwithstanding, after the fact David found
justification for cutting off the skirt of Shaul's robe, for it provided him
with proof that, had he so desired, he could have brought harm to Shaul. David turns to Shaul with aroused
emotions:
(9)
And David said to Shaul, "Why do you hearken to men's words,[7]
saying, 'Behold, David seeks your hurt?' (10) Behold, this day your eyes have
seen how that the Lord had delivered you today into my hand in the cave, and
some bade me kill you; but my eye spared you, and I said, 'I will not put forth
my hand against my lord, for he is the Lord's anointed.' (11) Moreover, my
father, see, yea, see the skirt of your robe in my hand; for in that I cut off
the skirt of your robe, and killed you not, know you and see that there is
neither evil nor transgression in my hand, and I have not sinned against you,
though you lay wait for my soul to take it. (12) The Lord judge between me and you,
and the Lord avenge me of you; but my hand shall not be upon you. (13) As says the proverb of the
ancients: Out of the wicked comes forth wickedness[8];
but my hand shall not be upon you.
(14) After whom is the king of Israel come out? After whom do you pursue?
after a dead dog, after a flea.
(15) The Lord therefore be judge, and give sentence between me and you,
and see, and plead my cause, and deliver me out of your hand."[9]
David tells Shaul the simple truth: He had never sinned against Shaul,
and there is no justification whatsoever for Shaul's chasing after him. David leaves the judgment between them
to God, declaring that he will not personally bring harm to Shaul owing to his
recognition that he is the Lord's anointed.
Shaul
is not left with very much to say, and he therefore apologizes to
David:
(16)
that Shaul said, "Is this your voice, my son David?" And Shaul lifted up his
voice, and wept. (17) And he said
to David, "You are more righteous than I; for you have rendered unto me good,
whereas I have rendered unto you evil.
(18) And you have declared this day how that you have dealt well with me;
forasmuch as when the Lord had delivered me up into your hand, you did not kill
me. (19) For if a man find his
enemy, will he let him go well away? Wherefore the Lord reward you good for that
which you have done unto me this day.
(20) And now, behold, I know that you shall surely be king, and that the
kingdom of Israel shall be established in your hand. (21) Swear now, therefore, unto me by
the Lord that you will not cut off my seed after me, and that you will not
destroy my name out of my father's house."
Shaul's weeping is indeed moving.
He weeps out of frustration and out of pain; because he knows that David
is telling him the entire truth; because he is unable to overcome his evil
spirit; because he must stand before David, whose music was the only thing that
had helped him when the evil spirit fell upon him; because he recognized that
what he was doing was not good; and because he truly internalized, perhaps for
the first time, that David would indeed rule as king in his place. At this moment of despondency, of inner
truth, of heart-to-heart talk, Shaul is worried about only one thing: that
perhaps when he ascends to the throne, David will destroy the house of Shaul, in
the manner of other kings over the course of history.[10]
But Shaul does not promise what he is incapable of promising that he will not
pursue David in the future.
Even though "David swore unto Shaul" (verse 23), the chapter does not end
on an optimistic note:
(23)
And Shaul went home; but David and his men got them up unto the
stronghold.
The story of Shaul's pursuit of David is not over.
(Translated
by David Strauss)
[1] According to the common understanding among the commentators (here and
in Shoftim 3:24), this expression refers to a bowel movement (see Rashi
here).
[2] See 22:2, and our first lecture on chapter 22 (lecture no.
42).
[3] David's words correspond to the words of his men: Corresponding to what
they say: "Behold the day in which the Lord has said unto you," David
says: "The Lord forbid it me, that I should do this thing." Corresponding
to the general statement of David's men, "And you shall do to him as it shall
seem good unto you," David emphasizes what they really had in mind: "The
Lord forbid it me
to put forth my hand against him." And corresponding
to the description of Shaul in David's men's words as "your enemy," David
clarifies of whom they are speaking: "That I should do this thing unto my
lord, the Lord's anointed, to put forth my hand against him, seeing he is
the Lord's anointed."
[4] The continuation of the Ralbag's comment is even more surprising. He suggests that David may have
refrained from killing Shaul for practical, rather than moral, reasons: "For
this would be a reason afterwards to make light of killing kings, and David knew
that the kingdom would be his, and therefore he tried to cast off [the idea] of
killing kings who are the Lord's anointed.
And for this very reason he ordered the execution of the Amaleki lad who
told him that he had killed Shaul, even though Shaul had commanded him to do so,
and for this reason he also ordered the execution of the person who killed
Ish-Boshet the son of Shaul." According to the Ralbag, David acted out of
self-interest: Knowing that he would eventually rule as king, David wanted to
avoid giving legitimacy to regicide.
This goal also guided him when he ordered the execution of the Amaleki
lad who had killed Shaul and of Rechev and Ba'ana who had killed
Ish-Boshet. The Ralbag's argument
is very difficult, and this attitude toward David finds no expression in
Scripture itself.
[5]
Chazal's censure of this action is well known: "Whoever treats garments contemptuously
will, in the end, derive no benefit from them; for it says: 'Now King David was
old and stricken in years; and they covered him with clothes, but he could get
no heat' (I Melakhim 1:1)" (Berakhot 62b). According to the plain sense, of course,
the problem is the insult to the king's honor, and not just the insult to the
clothing in itself.
[6] In the previous
lectures, we noted other aspects of clothing as an expression of distinguished
positions: Aharon and his sons were consecrated for service in the Mishkan
through their donning of the priestly garments (see Shemot 28);
Eliyahu threw his mantle over Elisha when he appointed him as prophet in great
measure to replace himself (I Melakhim 19); and elsewhere.
[7] The plain sense of the
words "divrei adam" is "the people's words." David adopts a respectful
attitude toward Shaul, presenting the matter as if other people were inciting
Shaul in vain against David. It is
possible, however, that this wording also alludes to Shaul himself, for David
had already employed this double meaning when he said to Shaul before going out
to fight Golyat: "Let no man's (adam) heart fail within him; your
servant will go and fight with this Pelishti" (17:32) (see lecture no. 33, note
3).
[8] What is "the proverb of
the ancients" (meshal ha-kadmoni)? Rashi (based on Chazal)
explains that the reference is to the Torah, which is "the proverb of the Holy
One, blessed be He." Thus, he is forced to find a source for the proverb in the
Torah (for the proverb as it is worded here, "out of
the wicked comes forth wickedness," does not appear in the Torah). He explains that the idea finds
expression in the verse, "But God allowed it to happen to him" (Shemot
21:13), and as the Gemara understands it (Makkot 10b): "What is Scripture
talking about? Two people who [each] killed [another person], one
unintentionally and the other intentionally. Regarding the first there were no
witnesses and regarding the second there were no witnesses. The Holy One, blessed be He, arranges
that they come to the same inn. The
one who killed intentionally sits under a ladder, and the one who killed
unintentionally descends the ladder, falls upon the other person and kills
him. The one who killed
intentionally is killed, and the one who killed unintentionally goes into
exile." Rashi also follows the same approach in other places where a proverb is
recited. He consistently avoids
explaining that the proverb is a citation from sources outside the Torah. Thus, for example, on the verse,
"Whereas it is said in the book of the wars of the Lord, Vahev in Sufa
and Arnon among the brooks." (Bamidbar 21:14), Rashi does not explain
that the reference is to a separate book that is not in our hands (as proposed
by the Ibn Ezra), but rather he explains these words as a description of time:
"Whenever people narrate the miracles that were wrought for our fathers." Twice,
Rashi explains the term "the book of the righteous" as referring to the
Torah (see his commentary to Yehoshua 10:13, against the Ralbag ad loc.;
and II Shmuel 1:18 there, too, against the Ralbag, who explains that
the term refers to a book that we do not have in our
possession.
The
Radak, on the other hand, explains that the reference here is to a proverb
expressed by an ancient (kadmon) ruler. According to the plain sense of the
text, it would appear that the reference is to the people of the east
(kedem) country, who were known for their wisdom and proverbs, as it is
stated: "And Shlomo's wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the children of the east
country (benei kedem)
And he spoke three thousand proverbs" (I
Melakhim 5:10-12); and see Yeshayahu 19:11 and Iyov
1:3.
[9] The word "yad"
(hand) appears many times in the chapter in different senses: "Behold, I
will deliver your enemy in your hand," in the sense of control; "to put
forth my hand against him," in the sense of injury; "the Lord had
delivered you today into my hand," in the sense of control; "the skirt of
your robe in my hand," in the sense of an actual hand; "there is neither
evil nor transgression in my hand," in the sense of actions; "but my
hand shall not be upon you," in the sense of injury; "and
deliver me out of your hand," in the sense of "from you." Since
the word is used to express rule and control, it is of great significance in a
chapter which focuses on the issue of the identity of the true
ruler.
[10] We find in Scripture
that Basha destroyed the house of Yerov'am (I Melakhim 14:14; 15:27-30),
and Yehu destroyed the house of Ach'av (II Melakhim 9:6-10; 10:11). In those two cases, the previous royal
house was eradicated based on a prophecy, because those kings sinned and caused
Israel to sin.
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