The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 65: The Magnanimity of David
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Knowing what he did of Saul's past course, David could put
no confidence in the assurances of the king, nor hope that his
penitent condition would long continue. So when Saul returned
to his home David remained in the strongholds of the mountains.
The enmity that is cherished toward the servants of God by
those who have yielded to the power of Satan changes at times
to a feeling of reconciliation and favor, but the change does not
always prove to be lasting. After evil-minded men have engaged
in doing and saying wicked things against the Lord's servants, [p. 663] the conviction that they have been in the wrong sometimes takes
deep hold upon their minds. The Spirit of the Lord strives with
them, and they humble their hearts before God, and before those
whose influence they have sought to destroy, and they may change
their course toward them. But as they again open the door to the
suggestions of the evil one, the old doubts are revived, the old
enmity is awakened, and they return to engage in the same work
which they repented of, and for a time abandoned. Again they
speak evil, accusing and condemning in the bitterest manner
the very ones to whom they made most humble confession. Satan
can use such souls with far greater power after such a course has
been pursued than he could before, because they have sinned
against greater light.
"And Samuel died; and all the Israelites were gathered
together, and lamented him, and buried him in his house at
Ramah." The death of Samuel was regarded as an irreparable
loss by the nation of Israel. A great and good prophet and an
eminent judge had fallen in death, and the grief of the people
was deep and heartfelt. From his youth up Samuel had walked
before Israel in the integrity of his heart; although Saul had
been the acknowledged king, Samuel had wielded a more powerful
influence than he, because his record was one of faithfulness,
obedience, and devotion. We read that he judged Israel all the
days of his life.
As the people contrasted the course of Saul with that of Samuel,
they saw what a mistake they had made in desiring a king
that they might not be different from the nations around them.
Many looked with alarm at the condition of society, fast becoming
leavened with irreligion and godlessness. The example of
their ruler was exerting a widespread influence, and well might
Israel mourn that Samuel, the prophet of the Lord, was dead.
The nation had lost the founder and president of its sacred
schools, but that was not all. It had lost him to whom the people
had been accustomed to go with their great troubles—lost
one who had constantly interceded with God in behalf of the
best interests of its people. The intercession of Samuel had given
a feeling of security; for "the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous
man availeth much." James 5:16. The people felt now that
God was forsaking them. The king seemed little less than a madman.
Justice was perverted, and order was turned to confusion. [p. 664]
It was when the nation was racked with internal strife, when
the calm, God-fearing counsel of Samuel seemed to be most
needed, that God gave His aged servant rest. Bitter were the
reflections of the people as they looked upon his quiet resting
place, and remembered their folly in rejecting him as their ruler;
for he had had so close a connection with Heaven that he seemed
to bind all Israel to the throne of Jehovah. It was Samuel who
had taught them to love and obey God; but now that he was
dead, the people felt that they were left to the mercies of a king
who was joined to Satan, and who would divorce the people
from God and heaven.
David could not be present at the burial of Samuel, but he
mourned for him as deeply and tenderly as a faithful son could
mourn for a devoted father. He knew that Samuel's death had
broken another bond of restraint from the actions of Saul, and he
felt less secure than when the prophet lived. While the attention
of Saul was engaged in mourning for the death of Samuel, David
took the opportunity to seek a place of greater security; so he fled
to the wilderness of Paran. It was here that he composed the one
hundred and twentieth and twenty-first psalms. In these desolate
wilds, realizing that the prophet was dead, and the king was his
enemy, he sang:
"My help cometh from the Lord,
Which made heaven and earth.
He will not suffer thy foot to be moved:
He that keepeth thee will not slumber.
Behold, He that keepeth Israel
Shall neither slumber nor sleep. . . .
The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil:
He shall preserve thy soul.
The Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy
coming in
From this time forth, and even forevermore." |
Psalm 121:2-8. |
While David and his men were in the wilderness of Paran, they
protected from the depredations of marauders the flocks and herds
of a wealthy man named Nabal, who had vast possessions in that
region. Nabal was a descendant of Caleb, but his character was
churlish and niggardly.
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