fbpx
Wikipedia

Saul

Saul (/sɔːl/; Hebrew: שָׁאוּל, Šāʾūl; Greek: Σαούλ, Saoúl; transl. "asked/prayed for") was, according to the Hebrew Bible, the first monarch of the United Kingdom of Israel. His reign, traditionally placed in the late 11th century BCE,[3] supposedly marked the transition of Israel and Judah from a scattered tribal society ruled by various judges to organized statehood.[4]

Saul
שָׁאוּל
Saul depicted in a detail from an 1878 oil painting by Ernst Josephson
King of Israel
Reignc. 1037–1010 BCE
PredecessorPosition established
SuccessorIsh-bosheth[1][2]
Diedc. 1010 BCE
Jezreel Valley, United Kingdom of Israel
SpousesAhinoam
Rizpah (concubine)
IssueIsh-bosheth
Jonathan
Abinadab
Melchishua
Merab
Michal
Armoni
Mephibosheth
Names
Saul ben Kish (שאול בן קיש)
HouseHouse of Saul
FatherKish

The historicity of Saul and the United Kingdom of Israel is not universally accepted, as what is known of both comes exclusively from the Hebrew Bible.[3][5] According to the text, he was anointed as king of the Israelites by Samuel, and reigned from Gibeah. Saul is said to have died by suicide when he "fell on his sword" during a battle with the Philistines at Mount Gilboa, in which three of his sons were also killed. The succession to his throne was contested between Ish-bosheth, his only surviving son, and David, his son-in-law; David ultimately prevailed and assumed kingship over Israel and Judah.

Biblical account

The biblical accounts of Saul's life are found in the Books of Samuel:

House of King Saul

According to the Hebrew text of the Bible, Saul reigned for two years, but Biblical commentators generally agree that the text is faulty and that a reign of 20 or 22 years is more probable.[3]. In the New Testament book of Acts 13:21, the Apostle Paul indicates that Saul’s reign was forty years.

According to the Tanakh, Saul was the son of Kish, of the family of the Matrites, and a member of the tribe of Benjamin, one of the twelve Tribes of Israel. It appears that he came from Gibeah.[6]

 
David and Saul (1885) by Julius Kronberg.

Saul married Ahinoam, daughter of Ahimaaz, with whom he sired at least seven sons (Jonathan, Abinadab, Malchishua, Ishvi, Armani, Mephibosheth and Ish-bosheth) and two daughters (Merab and Michal).[7]

Saul also had a concubine named Rizpah, daughter of Aiah, who bore him two sons, Armoni and Mephibosheth.[8]

Saul died at the Battle of Mount Gilboa,[9] and was buried in Zelah, in the region of Benjamin.[10] Three of Saul's sons – Jonathan, Abinadab, and Malchishua – died with him at Mount Gilboa.[11] His surviving son Ish-bosheth became king of Israel, at the age of forty. At David's request Abner had Michal returned to David. Ish-bosheth reigned for two years, but after the death of Abner, was killed by two of his own captains.[12]

During a famine, God told king David that the famine happened because of how Saul treated the Gibeonites. The Gibeonites told David that only the death of seven sons of Saul would compensate them for losing their livelihood after the priests at Nob were killed under Saul's orders.[13][14] David then granted the Gibeonites the jurisdiction to individually execute Saul's surviving two sons and five of Saul's grandsons (the sons of Merab and Adriel).[15] The Gibeonites killed all seven, and hung up their bodies at the sanctuary at Gibeah.[16] For five months their bodies were hung out in the elements, and the grieving Rizpah guarded them from being eaten by the beasts and birds of prey.[17] Finally, David had the bodies taken down and buried in the family grave at Zelah with the remains of Saul and their half-brother Jonathan.[18] Michal was childless.[19]

The only male descendant of Saul to survive was Mephibosheth, Jonathan's lame son,[20] who was five years old at the time of his father's and grandfather's deaths. In time, he came under the protection of David.[21] Mephibosheth had a young son, Micah,[22] who had four sons and descendants named until the ninth generation.[23]

Anointed as king

 
"Death of King Saul", 1848 by Elie Marcuse (Germany and France, 1817–1902)

The First Book of Samuel gives three accounts of Saul's rise to the throne in three successive chapters:

  • Saul is sent with a servant to look for his father's strayed donkeys. Leaving his home at Gibeah, they eventually arrive at the district of Zuph, at which point Saul suggests abandoning their search. Saul's servant tells him that they happen to be near the town of Ramah, where a famous seer is located, and suggests that they should consult him first. The seer (later identified by the text as Samuel) offers hospitality to Saul and later anoints him in private.[24][25]
  • A popular movement having arisen to establish a centralized monarchy like other nations, Samuel assembles the people at Mizpah in Benjamin to appoint a king, fulfilling his previous promise to do so.[26] Samuel organises the people by tribe and by clan. Using the Urim and Thummim,[27] he selects the tribe of Benjamin, from within the tribe selecting the clan of Matri, and from them selecting Saul. After having been chosen as monarch, Saul returns to his home in Gibeah, along with a number of followers.[28][29] However, some of the people are openly unhappy with the selection of Saul.
  • The Ammonites, led by Nahash, lay siege to Jabesh-Gilead. Under the terms of surrender, the occupants of the city are to be forced into slavery and have their right eyes removed. Instead they send word of this to the other tribes of Israel, and the tribes west of the Jordan assemble an army under Saul. Saul leads the army to victory over the Ammonites, and the people congregate at Gilgal where they acclaim Saul as king and he is crowned.[30][25] Saul's first act is to forbid retribution against those who had previously contested his kingship.

André Lemaire finds the third account probably the most reliable tradition.[31] The Pulpit Commentary distinguishes between a private and a public selection process.[32]

Saul among the prophets

Having been anointed by Samuel, Saul is told of signs indicating that he has been divinely appointed. The last of these is that Saul will be met by an ecstatic group of prophets leaving a high place and playing the lyre, tambourine, and flutes. Saul encounters the ecstatic prophets and joins them.[29] Later, Saul sends men to pursue David, but when they meet a group of ecstatic prophets playing music, they are overcome by the Spirit of God and join in giving prophetic words. Saul sends more men, but they too join the prophets. Eventually, Saul himself goes and also joins the prophets.[33]

Military victories

After relieving the siege of Jabesh-Gilead, Saul conducts military campaigns against the Moabites, Ammonites, Edomites, Aram Rehob and the kings of Zobah, the Philistines, and the Amalekites.[34][6] A biblical summary states that "wherever he turned, he was victorious".[35]

In the second year of his reign, King Saul, his son Jonathan, and a small force of a few thousand Israelite soldiers defeated a massive Philistine force of 3,000 chariots, 6,000 horsemen, and more than 30,000 infantry in the pass of Michmash. After the battle, Saul instructs his armies, by a rash oath, to fast. Methodist commentator Joseph Benson suggests that "Saul's intention in putting this oath was undoubtedly to save time, lest the Philistines should gain ground of them in their flight. But the event showed it was a false policy; for the people were so faint and weak for want of food, that they were less able to follow and slay the Philistines than if they had stopped to take a moderate refreshment".[36] Jonathan's party were not aware of the oath and ate honey, resulting in Jonathan realising that he had broken an oath of which he was not aware, but was nevertheless liable for its breach, until popular intervention allowed Jonathan to be saved from death on account of his victory over the Philistines.[37]

Rejection

 
Saul and the Witch of Endor by Gustave Dore.

During Saul's campaign against the Philistines, Samuel said that he would arrive in seven days to perform the requisite rites. When a week passed with no word of Samuel, and with the Israelites growing restless, Saul prepares for battle by offering sacrifices. Samuel arrives just as Saul is finishing sacrificing and reprimands Saul for not obeying his instructions.

Several years after Saul's victory against the Philistines at Michmash Pass, Samuel instructs Saul to make war on the Amalekites and to "utterly destroy" them including all their livestock[38] in fulfilment of a mandate set out:[39]

When the Lord your God has given you rest from all your enemies on every hand, in the land that the Lord your God is giving you as an inheritance to possess, you shall blot out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven; do not forget.

Having forewarned the Kenites who were living among the Amalekites to leave, Saul goes to war and defeats the Amalekites. Saul kills all the men, women, children and poor quality livestock, but leaves alive the king, Agag, and best livestock. When Samuel learns that Saul has not obeyed his instructions in full and tries to justify it by using the livestock to perform animal sacrifices in a self-righteous manner, he informs Saul that God has rejected him as king. As Samuel turns to go, Saul seizes hold of his garments and tears off a piece; Samuel prophesies that the kingdom will likewise be torn from Saul. Samuel then kills Agag himself. Samuel and Saul each return home and never meet again after these events.[40]

Saul and David

 
David Plays the Harp for Saul, by Rembrandt van Rijn, c. 1650 and 1670.

After Samuel tells Saul that God has rejected him as king, David, a son of Jesse, from the tribe of Judah, enters the story: from this point on Saul's story is largely the account of his increasingly troubled relationship with David.

  • Samuel heads to Bethlehem, ostensibly to offer sacrifice and invited Jesse and his sons. Dining together, Jesse's sons are brought one by one to Samuel, each being rejected; at last, Jesse sends for David, the youngest, who is tending sheep. When brought to Samuel, David is anointed by him in front of his other brothers.
  • In 1 Samuel 16:25-23, Saul is troubled by an evil spirit sent by God.[41] He requests soothing music, and a servant recommends David the son of Jesse, who is renowned for his skills as a harpist and other talents:[42]
a son of Jesse the Bethlehemite, who is skillful in playing, a mighty man of valor, a man of war, prudent in speech, and a handsome person; and the Lord is with him
When word of Saul's needs reaches Jesse, he sends David, who had been looking after Jesse's flock, with gifts as a tribute,[43] and David is appointed as Saul's armor bearer. With Jesse's permission he remains at court, playing the harp as needed to calm Saul during his troubled spells.[44]
  • The Philistines return with an army to attack Israel, and the Philistine and Israelite forces gather on opposite sides of a valley. The Philistine's champion Goliath issues a challenge for single combat, but none of the Israelite accept. David is described as a young shepherd who happens to be delivering food to his three eldest brothers in the army, and he hears Goliath's challenge. David speaks mockingly of the Philistines to some soldiers; his speech is overheard and reported to Saul, who summons David and appoints David as his champion. David easily defeats Goliath with a single shot from a sling. At the end of the passage, Saul asks his general, Abner, who David is.[45]

Saul offered his elder daughter Merab as a wife to the now popular David, after his victory over Goliath, but David demurred. David distinguishes himself in the Philistine wars. Upon David's return from battle, the women praise him in song:

Saul has slain his thousands and David his tens of thousands [46]

implying that David is the greater warrior. Saul fears David's growing popularity and henceforth views him as a rival to the throne.

Saul's son Jonathan and David become close friends. Jonathan recognizes David as the rightful king, and "made a covenant with David, because he loved him as his own soul."[47] Jonathan even gives David his military clothes, symbolizing David's position as successor to Saul.

 
Saul threatening David, by José Leonardo.

On two occasions, Saul threw a spear at David as he played the harp for Saul. David becomes increasingly successful and Saul becomes increasingly resentful. Now Saul actively plots against David. Saul offered his other daughter, Michal in marriage to David. David initially rejects this offer also, claiming he is too poor. Saul offers to accept a bride price of 100 Philistine foreskins, intending that David die in the attempt. Instead, David obtains 200 foreskins and is consequently married to Michal. Jonathan arranges a short-lived reconciliation between Saul and David and for a while David served Saul "as in times past"[48] until "the distressing spirit from the Lord" re-appeared. Saul sends assassins in the night, but Michal helps him escape, tricking them by placing a household idol in his bed. David flees to Jonathan, who arranges a meeting with his father. While dining with Saul, Jonathan explains David's absence, saying he has been called away to his brothers. But Saul sees through the ruse and reprimands Jonathan for protecting David, warning him that his love of David will cost him the kingdom, furiously throwing a spear at him. The next day, Jonathan meets with David and tells him Saul's intent. The two friends say their goodbyes, and David flees into the countryside. Saul later marries Michal to another man.

Saul is later informed by his head shepherd, Doeg the Edomite, that high priest Ahimelech assisted David, giving him the sword of Goliath, which had been kept at the temple at Nob. Doeg kills Ahimelech and eighty-five other priests and Saul orders the death of the entire population of Nob.

David had left Nob by this point and had amassed some 300 dissatisfied men, including some outlaws. With these men David rescues the town of Keilah from a Philistine attack. Saul realises he could trap David and his men by laying the city to siege. David realizes that the citizens of Keilah will betray him to Saul. He flees to Ziph pursued by Saul. Saul hunts David in the vicinity of Ziph on two occasions:

  • Some of the inhabitants of Ziph betray David's location to Saul, but David hears about it and flees with his men to Maon. Saul follows David, but is forced to break off pursuit when the Philistines invade. After dealing with that threat Saul tracks David to the caves at Engedi. As he searches the cave David manages to cut off a piece of Saul's robe without being discovered, yet David restrains his men from harming the king. David then leaves the cave, revealing himself to Saul, and gives a speech that persuades Saul to reconcile.
  • On the second occasion, Saul returns to Ziph with his men. When David hears of this, he slips into Saul's camp by night, and again restrains his men from killing the king; instead he steals Saul's spear and water jug, leaving his own spear thrust into the ground by Saul's side. The next day, David reveals himself to Saul, showing the jug and spear as proof that he could have slain him. David then persuades Saul to reconcile with him; the two swear never to harm each other. After this they never see each other again.

Battle of Gilboa and the death of King Saul

 
The Battle of Gilboa, by Jean Fouquet, the protagonists depicted anachronistically with 15th century armour.

The Philistines make war again, assembling at Shunem, and Saul leads his army to face them at Mount Gilboa. Before the battle he goes to consult a medium or witch at Endor. The medium, unaware of his identity, reminds him that the king has made witchcraft a capital offence, but he assures her that Saul will not harm her. She conjures a spirit which appears to be the prophet Samuel,[49] and tells him that God has fully rejected him, will no longer hear his prayers, has given the kingdom to David and that the next day he will lose both the battle and his life. Saul collapses in fear, and the medium restores him with food in anticipation of the next day's battle.

Saul's death is described by the narrator (and also in 1 Chronicles 10) but a conflicting account is given by a young Amalekite who lies, thinking to win David's favour.[50][51][52] The defeated Israelites flee from the enemy and Saul asks his armour bearer to kill him, but the armour bearer refuses, and so Saul falls upon his own sword. But the Amalekite tells David he found Saul leaning on his spear after the battle and delivered the coup de grâce. David has the Amalekite put to death, advancing the theme that David will never kill the Lord's anointed king (c.f. 1 Samuel 24, 26).

The victorious Philistines recover Saul's body as well as those of his three sons who also died in the battle, decapitate them and display them on the wall of Beth-shan. They display Saul's armour in the temple of Ashtaroth (an Ascalonian temple of the Canaanites). But at night the inhabitants of Jabesh-Gilead retrieve the bodies for cremation and burial.[53] Later on, David takes the bones of Saul and of his son Jonathan and buries them in Zela, in the tomb of his father.[54][55] The account in 1 Chronicles summarises by stating that:

Saul died for his unfaithfulness which he had committed against the Lord, because he did not keep the word of the Lord, and also because he consulted a medium for guidance.[56]

Biblical criticism

There are several textual or narrative issues in the text, including the aforementioned conflicting accounts of Saul's rise to kingship and his death, as well as plays on words, that biblical scholars have discussed.

The birth-narrative of the prophet Samuel is found at 1 Samuel 1–28. It describes how Samuel's mother Hannah requests a son from Yahweh, and dedicates the child to God at the shrine of Shiloh. The passage makes extensive play with the root-elements of Saul's name, and ends with the phrase hu sa'ul le-Yahweh, "he is dedicated to Yahweh." Hannah names the resulting son Samuel, giving as her explanation, "because from God I requested him." Samuel's name, however, can mean "name of God," (or "Heard of God" or "Told of God") and the etymology and multiple references to the root of the name seems to fit Saul instead. The majority explanation for the discrepancy is that the narrative originally described the birth of Saul, and was given to Samuel in order to enhance the position of David and Samuel at the former king's expense.[57]

The Bible's tone with regard to Saul changes over the course of the narrative, especially around the passage where David appears, midway through 1 Samuel. Before, Saul is presented in positive terms, but afterward his mode of ecstatic prophecy is suddenly described as fits of madness, his errors and disobedience to Samuel's instructions are stressed and he becomes a paranoiac. This may indicate that the David story is inserted from a source loyal to the House of David; David's lament over Saul in 2 Samuel 1 then serves an apologetic purpose, clearing David of the blame for Saul's death.[58]

In the narrative of Saul's private anointing in 1 Samuel 9:1-10:16, Saul is not referred to as a king (melech), but rather as a "leader" or "commander" (nagid)[59][60] Saul is only given the title "king" (melech) at the public coronation ceremony at Gilgal.[61]

Various authors have attempted to harmonize the two narratives regarding Saul's death. Josephus writes that Saul's attempted suicide was stalled because he was not able to run the sword through himself, and that he therefore asked the Amalekite to finish it.[62] Later biblical criticism has posited that the story of Saul's death was redacted from various sources, although this view in turn has been criticized because it does not explain why the contradiction was left in by the redactors.[62] But since 2 Samuel records only the Amalekite's report, and not the report of any other eye-witness, some scholars theorize that the Amalekite may have been lying to try to gain favor with David. On this view, 1 Samuel records what actually happened, while 2 Samuel records what the Amalekite claimed happened.[63]

Classical rabbinical views

Two opposing views of Saul are found in classical rabbinical literature. One is based on the reverse logic that punishment is a proof of guilt, and therefore seeks to rob Saul of any halo which might surround him. The passage referring to Saul as a choice young man, and goodly (1 Samuel 9:2) is in this view interpreted as meaning that Saul was not good in every respect, but goodly only with respect to his personal appearance.[64] According to this view, Saul is only a weak branch,[65] owing his kingship not to his own merits, but rather to his grandfather, who had been accustomed to light the streets for those who went to the beit midrash, and had received as his reward the promise that one of his grandsons should sit upon the throne.[66]

The second view of Saul makes him appear in the most favourable light as man, as hero, and as king. In this view, it was on account of his modesty that he did not reveal the fact that he had been anointed king;[67] and he was extraordinarily upright as well as perfectly just. Nor was there any one more pious than he;[68] for when he ascended the throne he was as pure as a child, and had never committed sin.[69] He was marvelously handsome; and the maidens who told him concerning Samuel (1 Samuel 9:11–13) talked so long with him in order to observe his beauty for longer.[70] In war he was able to march 120 miles without rest. When commanded to smite Amalek (1 Samuel 15:3), Saul said: For one found slain the Torah requires a sin offering;[71] and here so many shall be slain. If the old have sinned, why should the young suffer; and if men have been guilty, why should the cattle be destroyed? It was this humaneness which cost him his crown. And while Saul was merciful to his enemies, he was strict with his own people; when he found out that Ahimelech, a kohen, had assisted David with finding food, Saul, in retaliation, killed the remaining 85 kohanim of Ahimelech's family and the rest of his hometown, Nob.[72] The fact that he was merciful even to his enemies, being indulgent to rebels themselves, and frequently waiving the homage due to him, was incredible as well as deceiving. But if his mercy toward a foe was a sin, it was his only one; it was his misfortune that it was reckoned against him, while David (who had committed many sins) was so favored that it was not remembered to his injury.[73] In some respects Saul was superior to David, e.g., in having only one concubine (Rizpah), while David had many. Saul expended his own substance for the war, and although he knew that he and his sons would fall in battle, he nevertheless went forward, while David heeded the wish of his soldiers not to go to war in person.[74]

According to the Rabbis, Saul followed the rules of ritual impurity prescribed for the sacrifice,[75] and taught the people how they should slaughter cattle.[76] As a reward for this, God himself gave Saul a sword on the day of battle, since no other sword suitable for him was found.[77] Saul's attitude toward David was excused by arguing that his courtiers were all tale-bearers, and slandered David to him;[78] and in like manner he was incited by Doeg against the priests of Nob[79]—this act was forgiven him, however, and a heavenly voice (bat kol) was heard, proclaiming: Saul is the chosen one of God.[80] His anger at the Gibeonites (2 Samuel 21:2) was not personal hatred, but was induced by zeal for the welfare of Israel.[81] The fact that he made his daughter remarry (1 Samuel 25:44) finds its explanation in his (Saul's) view that her betrothal to David had been gained by false pretenses, and was therefore invalid.[82] During the lifetime of Saul there was no idolatry in Israel. The famine in the reign of David (2 Samuel 21:1), seemingly blamed on Saul, was in fact the people's fault, for not according Saul the proper honours at his burial.[81] In Sheol, Samuel reveals to Saul that in the next world, Saul would dwell with Samuel, which is a proof that all has been forgiven him by God.[83]

In Islam

Some Muslims refer to Saul as Ṭālūt (Arabic: طالوت), and believe that (as in the Bible) he was the commander of Israel. Other scholars, however, have identified Talut as Gideon[84] with the reasoning that the Qur'an references the same incident of the drinking from the river as that found in Judges 7:5–7 and other factors associated with Gideon. According to the Qur'an, Talut was chosen by the Prophet Samuel (not mentioned by name explicitly, but rather as "a Prophet" of the Israelites) after being asked by the people of Israel for a King to lead them into war. The Israelites criticized Samuel for appointing Talut, lacking respect for Talut because he was not wealthy. Samuel rebuked the people for this and told them that Talut was more favored than they were. Talut led the Israelites to victory over the army of Goliath, who was killed by Dawud (David). Talut is not considered a Nabi (Arabic: نَـبِي, Prophet), but a Divinely appointed King.[85]

Name

The name 'Ṭālūt' has uncertain etymology. Unlike some other Qur'anic figures, the Arabic name is not similar to the Hebrew name (Sha'ul). According to Muslim exegetes, the name 'Ṭālūt' means 'Tall' (from the Arabic "tūl") and refers to the extraordinary stature of Saul, which would be consistent with the Biblical account.[86] In explanation of the name, exegetes such as Tha'labi hold that at this time, the future King of Israel was to be recognised by his height; Samuel set up a measure, but no one in Israel reached its height except Ṭālūt (Saul).

Saul as the King of Israel

In the Qur'an, Israelites demanded a King after the time of Musa (Moses). God appointed Talut as their King. Saul was distinguished by the greatness of his knowledge and of his physique; it was a sign of his role as King that God brought back the Ark of the Covenant for Israel. Talut tested his people at a river; whoever drank from it would not follow him in battle excepting one who takes [from it] in the hollow of his hand. Many drank but only the faithful ventured on. In the battle, however, David slew Goliath and was made the subsequent King of Israel.[85]

The Qur'anic account[85] differs from the Biblical account (if Saul is assumed to be Talut) in that in the Bible the sacred Ark was returned to Israel before Saul's accession, and the test by drinking water is made in the Hebrew Bible not by Saul but by Gideon.[87]

Historicity

The historicity of Saul's kingdom is not universally accepted[3][5] and there is insufficient extrabiblical evidence to verify if the biblical account reflects historical reality.[88]: 50ff  While several scholars believe that the existence of the United Monarchy is corroborated by archaeological evidence, although with considerable theological exaggerations,[89][90][91] others, like Israel Finkelstein, believe it to be a late ideological construct.[3]

In the Jewish Study Bible (2014), Oded Lipschits states the concept of United Monarchy should be abandoned,[92] while Aren Maeir highlights the lack of evidence about the United Monarchy.[93] However, in his books Beyond the Texts (2018) and Has Archeology Buried the Bible? (2020) William G. Dever has defended the historicity of the United Monarchy, maintaining that the reigns of Saul, David and Solomon are "reasonably well attested".[94] Similar arguments were advanced by Amihai Mazar in a 2013 essay, which points toward archaeological evidence emerged from excavation sites in Jerusalem by Eilat Mazar and in Khirbet Qeiyafa by Yosef Garfinkel.[95] Archeology seems to confirm that until about 1000 BCE, the end of Iron Age I, Israelite society was essentially a society of farmers and stockbreeders without any truly centralized organization and administration.[31]

Psychological analyses

Accounts of Saul's behavior have made him a popular subject for speculation among modern psychiatrists. George Stein views the passages depicting Saul's ecstatic episodes as suggesting that he may have suffered from mania.[96] Martin Huisman sees the story of Saul as illustrative of the role of stress as a factor in depression.[97] Liubov Ben-Noun of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, believes that passages referring to King Saul's disturbed behavior indicate he was afflicted by a mental disorder, and lists a number of possible conditions.[98] However, Christopher C. H. Cook of the Department of Theology and Religion, Durham University, UK recommends caution in offering any diagnoses in relation to people who lived millennia ago.[99]

See also

References

  1. ^ Garfinkel, Yosef; Ganor, Saar; Hasel, Michael G. (2018). In the Footsteps of King David: Revelations from an Ancient Biblical City. Thames & Hudson. p. 182. ISBN 978-0-50077428-1. from the original on 2020-10-11. Retrieved 2020-10-05.
  2. ^ Avioz, Michael (2015). Josephus' Interpretation of the Books of Samuel. Bloomsbury. p. 99. ISBN 9780567458575. from the original on 2020-10-11. Retrieved 2020-10-04.
  3. ^ a b c d e Finkelstein, Israel (2006). "The Last Labayu: King Saul and the Expansion of the First North Israelite Territorial Entity". In Amit, Yairah; Ben Zvi, Ehud; Finkelstein, Israel; et al. (eds.). Essays on Ancient Israel in Its Near Eastern Context: A Tribute to Nadav Naʼaman. Eisenbrauns. pp. 171 ff. ISBN 9781575061283. Retrieved 2016-03-02.
  4. ^ Van der Toorn, Karel (1993). "Saul and the rise of Israelite state religion". Vetus Testamentum. XLIII (4): 519–542. JSTOR 1518499.
  5. ^ a b Baruch Halpern (2003). David's Secret Demons: Messiah, Murderer, Traitor, King. Wm. B. Eerdmans. pp. 208–211.
  6. ^ a b Jacobs, Joseph; Price, Ira Maurice; Singer, Isidore; Lauterbach, Jacob Zallel (1906). "Saul". Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  7. ^ 1 Samuel 14:51 lists three sons – Jonathan, and Ishvi, and Malchi-shua – and the two daughters. But see also 2 Samuel 2:8 and 1 Chronicles 8:33.
  8. ^ 2 Samuel 21:8
  9. ^ 1 Samuel 31:3–6; 1 Chronicles 10:3–6
  10. ^ 2 Samuel 21:14
  11. ^ 1 Samuel 31:2; 1 Chronicles 10:2
  12. ^ 2 Samuel 4:5
  13. ^ 2 Samuel 21:1-6
  14. ^ Ellenson, David (2004). After Emancipation: Jewish Religious Responses to Modernity. Hebrew Union College Press. p. 422. ISBN 0878202234.
  15. ^ 2 Samuel 21:8–9
  16. ^ 2 Samuel 21:8-9
  17. ^ 2 Samuel 21:10
  18. ^ 2 Samuel 21:13-14
  19. ^ 2 Samuel 6:23
  20. ^ 2 Samuel 4:4
  21. ^ 2 Samuel 9:7–13
  22. ^ 2 Samuel 9:12
  23. ^ 1 Chronicles 8:35–38
  24. ^ 1 Samuel 9
  25. ^ a b Driscoll, James F. (1912). "Saul". The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 13. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  26. ^ 1 Samuel 8
  27. ^ Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 1 Samuel 10, accessed 1 May 2017
  28. ^ 1 Samuel 10:17-24
  29. ^ a b ""Saul, First King of Israel", Chabad.org".
  30. ^ 1 Samuel 11
  31. ^ a b "King Saul".
  32. ^ Pulpit Commentary on 1 Samuel 10, accessed 1 May 2017
  33. ^ 1 Samuel 19:24
  34. ^ 1 Samuel 14:47
  35. ^ 1 Samuel 14:47: New Living Translation; other translations vary
  36. ^ Benson Commentary on 1 Samuel 14, accessed 7 May 2017
  37. ^ 1 Samuel 14:24–45
  38. ^ 1 Samuel 15:3
  39. ^ Deuteronomy 25:19
  40. ^ 1 Samuel 15:33–35
  41. ^ Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 1 Samuel 16, accessed 12 May 2017
  42. ^ 1 Samuel 16:14–23
  43. ^ 1 Samuel 16:20: a donkey loaded with bread, a skin of wine, and a young goat
  44. ^ 1 Samuel 17:15 suggests David only attended court periodically.
  45. ^ 1 Samuel 17:1–18:5
  46. ^ 1 Samuel 18:7, recurring in 1 Samuel 21:11 and 1 Samuel 29:5
  47. ^ "1 Samuel 18; ESV – David and Jonathan's Friendship". Bible Gateway. Retrieved 15 September 2014.
  48. ^ 1 Samuel 19:1–7
  49. ^ Kent, Grenville (2014-01-01). ""Call up Samuel": Who Appeared to the Witch at En-Dor? (1 Samuel 28:3-25)". Andrews University Seminary Studies (AUSS). 52 (2). ISSN 0003-2980.
  50. ^ Meier, Samuel A. (2006). "The Sword. From Saul to David". In Ehrlich, Carl S.; White, Marsha C. (eds.). Saul in Story and Tradition. Mohr Siebeck. p. 160. ISBN 978-3-16-148569-5. 17. Of the two conflicting accounts of Saul's death in 1 Samuel 31 and 2 Samuel 1, ...
  51. ^ Nicholson, Ernest (February 2014). Deuteronomy and the Judaean Diaspora. OUP Oxford. p. 162. ISBN 978-0-19-870273-3. What thematic purpose is served, however, and how is the 'unity' of the narrative advanced, by two conflicting accounts of Saul's death: what has a twofold account of this incident to do with the legitimizing of David and how does it place Saul in an 'unfavourable light'?
  52. ^ Bregman, Lucy (2010). Religion, Death, and Dying. Vol. 3. ABC-CLIO. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-313-35180-8. The Bible is clear that King Saul died by suicide; however, it contains conflicting accounts of the particulars.
  53. ^ 1 Samuel 31:8–13, 1 Chronicles 10:12
  54. ^ 2 Samuel 21:12–14
  55. ^ G. Darshan, "The Reinterment of Saul and Jonathan's Bones (II Sam 21, 12–14) in Light of Ancient Greek Hero-Cult Stories", ZAW, 125,4 (2013), 640–645.
  56. ^ 1 Chronicles 10:13–14
  57. ^ The idea was originally advanced in the 19th century, and has most recently been elaborated in Kyle McCarter's influential commentary on I Samuel (P. Kyle McCarter, "I Samuel: A New Translation with Introduction, Notes and Commentary", Anchor Bible Series, 1980)
  58. ^ Hayes, Christine. "Introduction to the Old Testament (Hebrew Bible): Lecture 13 – The Deuteronomistic History: Prophets and Kings (1 and 2 Samuel)". Yale Open Courses. Yale University. Retrieved 2016-03-02.
  59. ^ 1 Samuel 9:16; 1 Samuel 10:1
  60. ^ Bright, John, A History of Israel, The Westminster Press, Philadelphia, 1972, p. 185.
  61. ^ 1 Samuel 11:15
  62. ^ a b Bill T. Arnold (1989). "The Amalekite report of Saul's death: political intrigue or incompatible sources?" (PDF). Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society. 32 (3): 289–298.
  63. ^ Life Application Study Bible: Note on 2 Samuel 1:13
  64. ^ Numbers Rabbah 9:28
  65. ^ Genesis Rabbah 25:3
  66. ^ Leviticus Rabbah 9:2
  67. ^ 1 Samuel 10:16; Megillah 13b
  68. ^ Moed Kattan 16b; Exodus Rabbah 30:12
  69. ^ Yoma 22b
  70. ^ Berachot 48b
  71. ^ Deuteronomy 21:1–9
  72. ^ Yoma 22b; Numbers Rabbah 1:10
  73. ^ Yoma 22b; Moed Kattan 16b, and Rashi ad loc.
  74. ^ 2 Samuel 21:17; Leviticus Rabbah 26:7; Yalkut Shimoni, Samuel 138
  75. ^ Yalkut Shimoni, Samuel 138
  76. ^ cf 1 Samuel 14:34
  77. ^ 1 Samuel 13:22
  78. ^ Deuteronomy Rabbah 5:10
  79. ^ 1 Samuel 22:16–19; Yalkut Shimoni, Samuel 131
  80. ^ Berachot 12b
  81. ^ a b Numbers Rabbah 8:4
  82. ^ Sanhedrin 19b
  83. ^ Eruvin 53b
  84. ^ "The Holy Quran". www.alislam.org.
  85. ^ a b c Quran %3Averse%3D246 2 :246–252
  86. ^ Leaman, Oliver, The Quran, An Encyclopedia, 2006, p. 638.
  87. ^ Judges vii. 5–7
  88. ^ Nelson, Richard D. Historical Roots of the Old Testament (1200–63 BCE). Volume 13 of Biblical Encyclopedia. Society of Biblical Lit, 2014 ISBN 9781628370065
  89. ^ Dever, William G. (2020-08-18). Has Archaeology Buried the Bible?. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4674-5949-5.
  90. ^ Halpern, Baruch (2003-11-12). David's Secret Demons: Messiah, Murderer, Traitor, King. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 978-0-8028-2797-5.
  91. ^ Mazar, Amihai (2014). "Archaeology and the Bible: Reflections on Historical Memory in the Deuteronomistic History". Congress Volume Munich 2013: 347–369. doi:10.1163/9789004281226_015. ISBN 9789004281226.
  92. ^ Lipschits, Oded (2014). "The history of Israel in the biblical period". In Berlin, Adele; Brettler, Marc Zvi (eds.). The Jewish Study Bible (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 2107–2119. ISBN 978-0-19-997846-5. As this essay will show, however, the premonarchic period long ago became a literary description of the mythological roots, the early beginnings of the nation and the way to describe the right of Israel on its land. The archeological evidence also does not support the existence of a united monarchy under David and Solomon as described in the Bible, so the rubric of "united monarchy" is best abandoned, although it remains useful for discussing how the Bible views the Israelite past. [...] Although the kingdom of Judah is mentioned in some ancient inscriptions, they never suggest that it was part of a unit comprised of Israel and Judah. There are no extrabiblical indications of a united monarchy called "Israel."
  93. ^ Maeir, Aren M. (2014). "Archeology and the Hebrew Bible". In Berlin, Adele; Brettler, Marc Zvi (eds.). The Jewish Study Bible (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 2125. ISBN 978-0-19-997846-5. Archeological evidence for the early stages of the monarchy is minimal at best. [...] In any case, the lack of substantive epigraphic materials from this early stage of the Iron Age II (after 1000 BCE), and other extensive archeological evidence, indicate that even if an early united monarchy existed, its level of political and bureaucratic complexity was not as developed as the biblical text suggests. The mention of the "House of David" in the Tel Dan inscription, which dates to the mid/late 9th c. BCE, does not prove the existence of an extensive Davidic kingdom in the early 10th c. BCE, but does indicate a Judean polity during the 9th c. that even then associated its origin with David. [...] Although there is archeological and historical evidence (from extra biblical documents) supporting various events of the monarchical period (esp. the later period) recorded in the Bible, there is little, if any evidence corroborating the biblical depiction of early Israelite or Judean history.
  94. ^ Dever, William G. (2020-08-18). Has Archaeology Buried the Bible?. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4674-5949-5. Finkelstein's low chronology, never followed by a majority of mainstream scholars, is a house of cards. Yet it is the only reason for attributing our copious tenth-century-BCE archaeological evidence of a united monarchy to the ninth century BCE. Finkelstein himself seems to have doubts. Originally, he insisted that no Judean state emerged until the eighth century BCE. Then it was the ninth century BCE. Eventually he posited a tenth-century-BCE "Saulide polity" with its "hub" at Gibeon—not Jerusalem, and not Solomon, only his predecessor! But there is absolutely no archaeological evidence for such an imaginary kingdom. Finkelstein's radical scenario is clever, but not convincing. It should be ignored. The reigns of Saul, David, and Solomon are reasonably well attested.
  95. ^ Mazar, Amihai (2014). "Archaeology and the Bible: Reflections on Historical Memory in the Deuteronomistic History". Congress Volume Munich 2013: 347–369. doi:10.1163/9789004281226_015. ISBN 9789004281226. The continuous debate concerning the evaluation of the United Monarchy as an historical entity cannot be resolved unequivocally by archaeology due to the current disagreements among archaeologists regarding the interpretation of the evidence. In my view, when taking into account the combined evidence presented above, as well as in previous papers, we cannot simply deny the existence of such an entity. How to define and explain this state in the tenthcentury is a matter of debate. In previous papers, I explained David's kingdom as a tribal state that emerged at a time of political vacuum in most of the southern Levant, caused by the great weakness of the earlier Canaanite population and the increase in the Israelite population in the highlands. This background, combined with personal qualities and a small but effective milittary force, may have enabled David to create a substantial political and military power, which may have included large parts of the country.
  96. ^ Stein, George (2011). "The case of King Saul: Did he have recurrent unipolar depression or bipolar affective disorder?". British Journal of Psychiatry. 198 (3): 212. doi:10.1192/bjp.198.3.212.
  97. ^ Huisman, M. (2007). "King Saul, work-related stress and depression". Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. 61 (10): 890. doi:10.1136/jech.2007.066522. PMC 2652967. PMID 17873225.
  98. ^ (Louba) Ben-Noun, Liubov (2003). "What was the Mental Disease that Afflicted King Saul?". Clinical Case Studies. 2 (4): 270–282. doi:10.1177/1534650103256296. S2CID 220300173.
  99. ^ Cook, Christopher C. H. (2012). "Psychiatry in scripture: Sacred texts and psychopathology". The Psychiatrist. 36 (6): 225–229. doi:10.1192/pb.bp.111.036418.

Bibliography

  • Driver, S. R., Notes on the Hebrew Text of the Books of Samuel, 1890
  • Cheyne, T. K., Aids to the Devout Study of Criticism, 1892, pp. 1–126
  • Kent, Grenville J.R. (2014-01-01). ""Call up Samuel": Who Appeared to the Witch at En-Dor? (1 Samuel 28:3-25)". Andrews University Seminary Studies (AUSS). 52 (2). ISSN 0003-2980.
  • Smith, H. P., Old Testament History, 1903, ch. vii.
  • Cheyne, T. K., and Black, (eds.) Encyclopedia Biblica
  • Hudson, J. Francis, 'Rabshakeh' [Lion Publishing 1992] is a fictionalisation of Saul's tragedy.
  • Green, A., 'King Saul, The True History of the First Messiah' [Lutterworth Press 2007]
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainJoseph Jacobs, Ira Maurice Price, Isidore Singer, and Jacob Zallel Lauterbach (1901–1906). "Saul". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links

  •   Media related to Saul (Biblical figure) at Wikimedia Commons
Saul of the United Kingdom of Israel & Judah
House of Saul
Cadet branch of the Tribe of Benjamin
Regnal titles
New title
Anointed king to
replace Judge Samuel
King of the United Kingdom
of Israel and Judah

1047–1007 BCE
Succeeded by

saul, this, article, about, king, biblical, figure, found, hebrew, bible, testament, figure, known, tarsus, paul, apostle, other, uses, disambiguation, ɔː, hebrew, או, Šāʾūl, greek, Σαούλ, saoúl, transl, asked, prayed, according, hebrew, bible, first, monarch,. This article is about King Saul the biblical figure found in the Hebrew Bible For the New Testament figure known as Saul of Tarsus see Paul the Apostle For other uses see Saul disambiguation Saul s ɔː l Hebrew ש או ל Saʾul Greek Saoyl Saoul transl asked prayed for was according to the Hebrew Bible the first monarch of the United Kingdom of Israel His reign traditionally placed in the late 11th century BCE 3 supposedly marked the transition of Israel and Judah from a scattered tribal society ruled by various judges to organized statehood 4 Saulש או ל Saul depicted in a detail from an 1878 oil painting by Ernst JosephsonKing of IsraelReignc 1037 1010 BCEPredecessorPosition establishedSuccessorIsh bosheth 1 2 Diedc 1010 BCEJezreel Valley United Kingdom of IsraelSpousesAhinoamRizpah concubine IssueIsh boshethJonathanAbinadabMelchishuaMerabMichalArmoniMephiboshethNamesSaul ben Kish שאול בן קיש HouseHouse of SaulFatherKishThe historicity of Saul and the United Kingdom of Israel is not universally accepted as what is known of both comes exclusively from the Hebrew Bible 3 5 According to the text he was anointed as king of the Israelites by Samuel and reigned from Gibeah Saul is said to have died by suicide when he fell on his sword during a battle with the Philistines at Mount Gilboa in which three of his sons were also killed The succession to his throne was contested between Ish bosheth his only surviving son and David his son in law David ultimately prevailed and assumed kingship over Israel and Judah Contents 1 Biblical account 1 1 House of King Saul 1 2 Anointed as king 1 3 Saul among the prophets 1 4 Military victories 1 5 Rejection 1 6 Saul and David 1 7 Battle of Gilboa and the death of King Saul 2 Biblical criticism 3 Classical rabbinical views 4 In Islam 4 1 Name 4 2 Saul as the King of Israel 5 Historicity 6 Psychological analyses 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksBiblical account EditThe biblical accounts of Saul s life are found in the Books of Samuel House of King Saul Edit According to the Hebrew text of the Bible Saul reigned for two years but Biblical commentators generally agree that the text is faulty and that a reign of 20 or 22 years is more probable 3 In the New Testament book of Acts 13 21 the Apostle Paul indicates that Saul s reign was forty years According to the Tanakh Saul was the son of Kish of the family of the Matrites and a member of the tribe of Benjamin one of the twelve Tribes of Israel It appears that he came from Gibeah 6 David and Saul 1885 by Julius Kronberg Saul married Ahinoam daughter of Ahimaaz with whom he sired at least seven sons Jonathan Abinadab Malchishua Ishvi Armani Mephibosheth and Ish bosheth and two daughters Merab and Michal 7 Saul also had a concubine named Rizpah daughter of Aiah who bore him two sons Armoni and Mephibosheth 8 Saul died at the Battle of Mount Gilboa 9 and was buried in Zelah in the region of Benjamin 10 Three of Saul s sons Jonathan Abinadab and Malchishua died with him at Mount Gilboa 11 His surviving son Ish bosheth became king of Israel at the age of forty At David s request Abner had Michal returned to David Ish bosheth reigned for two years but after the death of Abner was killed by two of his own captains 12 During a famine God told king David that the famine happened because of how Saul treated the Gibeonites The Gibeonites told David that only the death of seven sons of Saul would compensate them for losing their livelihood after the priests at Nob were killed under Saul s orders 13 14 David then granted the Gibeonites the jurisdiction to individually execute Saul s surviving two sons and five of Saul s grandsons the sons of Merab and Adriel 15 The Gibeonites killed all seven and hung up their bodies at the sanctuary at Gibeah 16 For five months their bodies were hung out in the elements and the grieving Rizpah guarded them from being eaten by the beasts and birds of prey 17 Finally David had the bodies taken down and buried in the family grave at Zelah with the remains of Saul and their half brother Jonathan 18 Michal was childless 19 The only male descendant of Saul to survive was Mephibosheth Jonathan s lame son 20 who was five years old at the time of his father s and grandfather s deaths In time he came under the protection of David 21 Mephibosheth had a young son Micah 22 who had four sons and descendants named until the ninth generation 23 Anointed as king Edit Death of King Saul 1848 by Elie Marcuse Germany and France 1817 1902 The First Book of Samuel gives three accounts of Saul s rise to the throne in three successive chapters Saul is sent with a servant to look for his father s strayed donkeys Leaving his home at Gibeah they eventually arrive at the district of Zuph at which point Saul suggests abandoning their search Saul s servant tells him that they happen to be near the town of Ramah where a famous seer is located and suggests that they should consult him first The seer later identified by the text as Samuel offers hospitality to Saul and later anoints him in private 24 25 A popular movement having arisen to establish a centralized monarchy like other nations Samuel assembles the people at Mizpah in Benjamin to appoint a king fulfilling his previous promise to do so 26 Samuel organises the people by tribe and by clan Using the Urim and Thummim 27 he selects the tribe of Benjamin from within the tribe selecting the clan of Matri and from them selecting Saul After having been chosen as monarch Saul returns to his home in Gibeah along with a number of followers 28 29 However some of the people are openly unhappy with the selection of Saul The Ammonites led by Nahash lay siege to Jabesh Gilead Under the terms of surrender the occupants of the city are to be forced into slavery and have their right eyes removed Instead they send word of this to the other tribes of Israel and the tribes west of the Jordan assemble an army under Saul Saul leads the army to victory over the Ammonites and the people congregate at Gilgal where they acclaim Saul as king and he is crowned 30 25 Saul s first act is to forbid retribution against those who had previously contested his kingship Andre Lemaire finds the third account probably the most reliable tradition 31 The Pulpit Commentary distinguishes between a private and a public selection process 32 Saul among the prophets Edit Having been anointed by Samuel Saul is told of signs indicating that he has been divinely appointed The last of these is that Saul will be met by an ecstatic group of prophets leaving a high place and playing the lyre tambourine and flutes Saul encounters the ecstatic prophets and joins them 29 Later Saul sends men to pursue David but when they meet a group of ecstatic prophets playing music they are overcome by the Spirit of God and join in giving prophetic words Saul sends more men but they too join the prophets Eventually Saul himself goes and also joins the prophets 33 Military victories Edit After relieving the siege of Jabesh Gilead Saul conducts military campaigns against the Moabites Ammonites Edomites Aram Rehob and the kings of Zobah the Philistines and the Amalekites 34 6 A biblical summary states that wherever he turned he was victorious 35 In the second year of his reign King Saul his son Jonathan and a small force of a few thousand Israelite soldiers defeated a massive Philistine force of 3 000 chariots 6 000 horsemen and more than 30 000 infantry in the pass of Michmash After the battle Saul instructs his armies by a rash oath to fast Methodist commentator Joseph Benson suggests that Saul s intention in putting this oath was undoubtedly to save time lest the Philistines should gain ground of them in their flight But the event showed it was a false policy for the people were so faint and weak for want of food that they were less able to follow and slay the Philistines than if they had stopped to take a moderate refreshment 36 Jonathan s party were not aware of the oath and ate honey resulting in Jonathan realising that he had broken an oath of which he was not aware but was nevertheless liable for its breach until popular intervention allowed Jonathan to be saved from death on account of his victory over the Philistines 37 Rejection Edit Saul and the Witch of Endor by Gustave Dore During Saul s campaign against the Philistines Samuel said that he would arrive in seven days to perform the requisite rites When a week passed with no word of Samuel and with the Israelites growing restless Saul prepares for battle by offering sacrifices Samuel arrives just as Saul is finishing sacrificing and reprimands Saul for not obeying his instructions Several years after Saul s victory against the Philistines at Michmash Pass Samuel instructs Saul to make war on the Amalekites and to utterly destroy them including all their livestock 38 in fulfilment of a mandate set out 39 When the Lord your God has given you rest from all your enemies on every hand in the land that the Lord your God is giving you as an inheritance to possess you shall blot out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven do not forget Having forewarned the Kenites who were living among the Amalekites to leave Saul goes to war and defeats the Amalekites Saul kills all the men women children and poor quality livestock but leaves alive the king Agag and best livestock When Samuel learns that Saul has not obeyed his instructions in full and tries to justify it by using the livestock to perform animal sacrifices in a self righteous manner he informs Saul that God has rejected him as king As Samuel turns to go Saul seizes hold of his garments and tears off a piece Samuel prophesies that the kingdom will likewise be torn from Saul Samuel then kills Agag himself Samuel and Saul each return home and never meet again after these events 40 Saul and David Edit David Plays the Harp for Saul by Rembrandt van Rijn c 1650 and 1670 After Samuel tells Saul that God has rejected him as king David a son of Jesse from the tribe of Judah enters the story from this point on Saul s story is largely the account of his increasingly troubled relationship with David Samuel heads to Bethlehem ostensibly to offer sacrifice and invited Jesse and his sons Dining together Jesse s sons are brought one by one to Samuel each being rejected at last Jesse sends for David the youngest who is tending sheep When brought to Samuel David is anointed by him in front of his other brothers In 1 Samuel 16 25 23 Saul is troubled by an evil spirit sent by God 41 He requests soothing music and a servant recommends David the son of Jesse who is renowned for his skills as a harpist and other talents 42 a son of Jesse the Bethlehemite who is skillful in playing a mighty man of valor a man of war prudent in speech and a handsome person and the Lord is with him When word of Saul s needs reaches Jesse he sends David who had been looking after Jesse s flock with gifts as a tribute 43 and David is appointed as Saul s armor bearer With Jesse s permission he remains at court playing the harp as needed to calm Saul during his troubled spells 44 The Philistines return with an army to attack Israel and the Philistine and Israelite forces gather on opposite sides of a valley The Philistine s champion Goliath issues a challenge for single combat but none of the Israelite accept David is described as a young shepherd who happens to be delivering food to his three eldest brothers in the army and he hears Goliath s challenge David speaks mockingly of the Philistines to some soldiers his speech is overheard and reported to Saul who summons David and appoints David as his champion David easily defeats Goliath with a single shot from a sling At the end of the passage Saul asks his general Abner who David is 45 Saul offered his elder daughter Merab as a wife to the now popular David after his victory over Goliath but David demurred David distinguishes himself in the Philistine wars Upon David s return from battle the women praise him in song Saul has slain his thousands and David his tens of thousands 46 implying that David is the greater warrior Saul fears David s growing popularity and henceforth views him as a rival to the throne Saul s son Jonathan and David become close friends Jonathan recognizes David as the rightful king and made a covenant with David because he loved him as his own soul 47 Jonathan even gives David his military clothes symbolizing David s position as successor to Saul Saul threatening David by Jose Leonardo On two occasions Saul threw a spear at David as he played the harp for Saul David becomes increasingly successful and Saul becomes increasingly resentful Now Saul actively plots against David Saul offered his other daughter Michal in marriage to David David initially rejects this offer also claiming he is too poor Saul offers to accept a bride price of 100 Philistine foreskins intending that David die in the attempt Instead David obtains 200 foreskins and is consequently married to Michal Jonathan arranges a short lived reconciliation between Saul and David and for a while David served Saul as in times past 48 until the distressing spirit from the Lord re appeared Saul sends assassins in the night but Michal helps him escape tricking them by placing a household idol in his bed David flees to Jonathan who arranges a meeting with his father While dining with Saul Jonathan explains David s absence saying he has been called away to his brothers But Saul sees through the ruse and reprimands Jonathan for protecting David warning him that his love of David will cost him the kingdom furiously throwing a spear at him The next day Jonathan meets with David and tells him Saul s intent The two friends say their goodbyes and David flees into the countryside Saul later marries Michal to another man Saul is later informed by his head shepherd Doeg the Edomite that high priest Ahimelech assisted David giving him the sword of Goliath which had been kept at the temple at Nob Doeg kills Ahimelech and eighty five other priests and Saul orders the death of the entire population of Nob David had left Nob by this point and had amassed some 300 dissatisfied men including some outlaws With these men David rescues the town of Keilah from a Philistine attack Saul realises he could trap David and his men by laying the city to siege David realizes that the citizens of Keilah will betray him to Saul He flees to Ziph pursued by Saul Saul hunts David in the vicinity of Ziph on two occasions Some of the inhabitants of Ziph betray David s location to Saul but David hears about it and flees with his men to Maon Saul follows David but is forced to break off pursuit when the Philistines invade After dealing with that threat Saul tracks David to the caves at Engedi As he searches the cave David manages to cut off a piece of Saul s robe without being discovered yet David restrains his men from harming the king David then leaves the cave revealing himself to Saul and gives a speech that persuades Saul to reconcile On the second occasion Saul returns to Ziph with his men When David hears of this he slips into Saul s camp by night and again restrains his men from killing the king instead he steals Saul s spear and water jug leaving his own spear thrust into the ground by Saul s side The next day David reveals himself to Saul showing the jug and spear as proof that he could have slain him David then persuades Saul to reconcile with him the two swear never to harm each other After this they never see each other again Battle of Gilboa and the death of King Saul Edit The Battle of Gilboa by Jean Fouquet the protagonists depicted anachronistically with 15th century armour The Philistines make war again assembling at Shunem and Saul leads his army to face them at Mount Gilboa Before the battle he goes to consult a medium or witch at Endor The medium unaware of his identity reminds him that the king has made witchcraft a capital offence but he assures her that Saul will not harm her She conjures a spirit which appears to be the prophet Samuel 49 and tells him that God has fully rejected him will no longer hear his prayers has given the kingdom to David and that the next day he will lose both the battle and his life Saul collapses in fear and the medium restores him with food in anticipation of the next day s battle Saul s death is described by the narrator and also in 1 Chronicles 10 but a conflicting account is given by a young Amalekite who lies thinking to win David s favour 50 51 52 The defeated Israelites flee from the enemy and Saul asks his armour bearer to kill him but the armour bearer refuses and so Saul falls upon his own sword But the Amalekite tells David he found Saul leaning on his spear after the battle and delivered the coup de grace David has the Amalekite put to death advancing the theme that David will never kill the Lord s anointed king c f 1 Samuel 24 26 The victorious Philistines recover Saul s body as well as those of his three sons who also died in the battle decapitate them and display them on the wall of Beth shan They display Saul s armour in the temple of Ashtaroth an Ascalonian temple of the Canaanites But at night the inhabitants of Jabesh Gilead retrieve the bodies for cremation and burial 53 Later on David takes the bones of Saul and of his son Jonathan and buries them in Zela in the tomb of his father 54 55 The account in 1 Chronicles summarises by stating that Saul died for his unfaithfulness which he had committed against the Lord because he did not keep the word of the Lord and also because he consulted a medium for guidance 56 Biblical criticism EditThere are several textual or narrative issues in the text including the aforementioned conflicting accounts of Saul s rise to kingship and his death as well as plays on words that biblical scholars have discussed The birth narrative of the prophet Samuel is found at 1 Samuel 1 28 It describes how Samuel s mother Hannah requests a son from Yahweh and dedicates the child to God at the shrine of Shiloh The passage makes extensive play with the root elements of Saul s name and ends with the phrase hu sa ul le Yahweh he is dedicated to Yahweh Hannah names the resulting son Samuel giving as her explanation because from God I requested him Samuel s name however can mean name of God or Heard of God or Told of God and the etymology and multiple references to the root of the name seems to fit Saul instead The majority explanation for the discrepancy is that the narrative originally described the birth of Saul and was given to Samuel in order to enhance the position of David and Samuel at the former king s expense 57 The Bible s tone with regard to Saul changes over the course of the narrative especially around the passage where David appears midway through 1 Samuel Before Saul is presented in positive terms but afterward his mode of ecstatic prophecy is suddenly described as fits of madness his errors and disobedience to Samuel s instructions are stressed and he becomes a paranoiac This may indicate that the David story is inserted from a source loyal to the House of David David s lament over Saul in 2 Samuel 1 then serves an apologetic purpose clearing David of the blame for Saul s death 58 In the narrative of Saul s private anointing in 1 Samuel 9 1 10 16 Saul is not referred to as a king melech but rather as a leader or commander nagid 59 60 Saul is only given the title king melech at the public coronation ceremony at Gilgal 61 Various authors have attempted to harmonize the two narratives regarding Saul s death Josephus writes that Saul s attempted suicide was stalled because he was not able to run the sword through himself and that he therefore asked the Amalekite to finish it 62 Later biblical criticism has posited that the story of Saul s death was redacted from various sources although this view in turn has been criticized because it does not explain why the contradiction was left in by the redactors 62 But since 2 Samuel records only the Amalekite s report and not the report of any other eye witness some scholars theorize that the Amalekite may have been lying to try to gain favor with David On this view 1 Samuel records what actually happened while 2 Samuel records what the Amalekite claimed happened 63 Classical rabbinical views EditTwo opposing views of Saul are found in classical rabbinical literature One is based on the reverse logic that punishment is a proof of guilt and therefore seeks to rob Saul of any halo which might surround him The passage referring to Saul as a choice young man and goodly 1 Samuel 9 2 is in this view interpreted as meaning that Saul was not good in every respect but goodly only with respect to his personal appearance 64 According to this view Saul is only a weak branch 65 owing his kingship not to his own merits but rather to his grandfather who had been accustomed to light the streets for those who went to the beit midrash and had received as his reward the promise that one of his grandsons should sit upon the throne 66 The second view of Saul makes him appear in the most favourable light as man as hero and as king In this view it was on account of his modesty that he did not reveal the fact that he had been anointed king 67 and he was extraordinarily upright as well as perfectly just Nor was there any one more pious than he 68 for when he ascended the throne he was as pure as a child and had never committed sin 69 He was marvelously handsome and the maidens who told him concerning Samuel 1 Samuel 9 11 13 talked so long with him in order to observe his beauty for longer 70 In war he was able to march 120 miles without rest When commanded to smite Amalek 1 Samuel 15 3 Saul said For one found slain the Torah requires a sin offering 71 and here so many shall be slain If the old have sinned why should the young suffer and if men have been guilty why should the cattle be destroyed It was this humaneness which cost him his crown And while Saul was merciful to his enemies he was strict with his own people when he found out that Ahimelech a kohen had assisted David with finding food Saul in retaliation killed the remaining 85 kohanim of Ahimelech s family and the rest of his hometown Nob 72 The fact that he was merciful even to his enemies being indulgent to rebels themselves and frequently waiving the homage due to him was incredible as well as deceiving But if his mercy toward a foe was a sin it was his only one it was his misfortune that it was reckoned against him while David who had committed many sins was so favored that it was not remembered to his injury 73 In some respects Saul was superior to David e g in having only one concubine Rizpah while David had many Saul expended his own substance for the war and although he knew that he and his sons would fall in battle he nevertheless went forward while David heeded the wish of his soldiers not to go to war in person 74 According to the Rabbis Saul followed the rules of ritual impurity prescribed for the sacrifice 75 and taught the people how they should slaughter cattle 76 As a reward for this God himself gave Saul a sword on the day of battle since no other sword suitable for him was found 77 Saul s attitude toward David was excused by arguing that his courtiers were all tale bearers and slandered David to him 78 and in like manner he was incited by Doeg against the priests of Nob 79 this act was forgiven him however and a heavenly voice bat kol was heard proclaiming Saul is the chosen one of God 80 His anger at the Gibeonites 2 Samuel 21 2 was not personal hatred but was induced by zeal for the welfare of Israel 81 The fact that he made his daughter remarry 1 Samuel 25 44 finds its explanation in his Saul s view that her betrothal to David had been gained by false pretenses and was therefore invalid 82 During the lifetime of Saul there was no idolatry in Israel The famine in the reign of David 2 Samuel 21 1 seemingly blamed on Saul was in fact the people s fault for not according Saul the proper honours at his burial 81 In Sheol Samuel reveals to Saul that in the next world Saul would dwell with Samuel which is a proof that all has been forgiven him by God 83 In Islam EditSome Muslims refer to Saul as Ṭalut Arabic طالوت and believe that as in the Bible he was the commander of Israel Other scholars however have identified Talut as Gideon 84 with the reasoning that the Qur an references the same incident of the drinking from the river as that found in Judges 7 5 7 and other factors associated with Gideon According to the Qur an Talut was chosen by the Prophet Samuel not mentioned by name explicitly but rather as a Prophet of the Israelites after being asked by the people of Israel for a King to lead them into war The Israelites criticized Samuel for appointing Talut lacking respect for Talut because he was not wealthy Samuel rebuked the people for this and told them that Talut was more favored than they were Talut led the Israelites to victory over the army of Goliath who was killed by Dawud David Talut is not considered a Nabi Arabic ن ـب ي Prophet but a Divinely appointed King 85 Name Edit The name Ṭalut has uncertain etymology Unlike some other Qur anic figures the Arabic name is not similar to the Hebrew name Sha ul According to Muslim exegetes the name Ṭalut means Tall from the Arabic tul and refers to the extraordinary stature of Saul which would be consistent with the Biblical account 86 In explanation of the name exegetes such as Tha labi hold that at this time the future King of Israel was to be recognised by his height Samuel set up a measure but no one in Israel reached its height except Ṭalut Saul Saul as the King of Israel Edit In the Qur an Israelites demanded a King after the time of Musa Moses God appointed Talut as their King Saul was distinguished by the greatness of his knowledge and of his physique it was a sign of his role as King that God brought back the Ark of the Covenant for Israel Talut tested his people at a river whoever drank from it would not follow him in battle excepting one who takes from it in the hollow of his hand Many drank but only the faithful ventured on In the battle however David slew Goliath and was made the subsequent King of Israel 85 The Qur anic account 85 differs from the Biblical account if Saul is assumed to be Talut in that in the Bible the sacred Ark was returned to Israel before Saul s accession and the test by drinking water is made in the Hebrew Bible not by Saul but by Gideon 87 Historicity EditMain article Historicity of the Bible The historicity of Saul s kingdom is not universally accepted 3 5 and there is insufficient extrabiblical evidence to verify if the biblical account reflects historical reality 88 50ff While several scholars believe that the existence of the United Monarchy is corroborated by archaeological evidence although with considerable theological exaggerations 89 90 91 others like Israel Finkelstein believe it to be a late ideological construct 3 In the Jewish Study Bible 2014 Oded Lipschits states the concept of United Monarchy should be abandoned 92 while Aren Maeir highlights the lack of evidence about the United Monarchy 93 However in his books Beyond the Texts 2018 and Has Archeology Buried the Bible 2020 William G Dever has defended the historicity of the United Monarchy maintaining that the reigns of Saul David and Solomon are reasonably well attested 94 Similar arguments were advanced by Amihai Mazar in a 2013 essay which points toward archaeological evidence emerged from excavation sites in Jerusalem by Eilat Mazar and in Khirbet Qeiyafa by Yosef Garfinkel 95 Archeology seems to confirm that until about 1000 BCE the end of Iron Age I Israelite society was essentially a society of farmers and stockbreeders without any truly centralized organization and administration 31 Psychological analyses EditAccounts of Saul s behavior have made him a popular subject for speculation among modern psychiatrists George Stein views the passages depicting Saul s ecstatic episodes as suggesting that he may have suffered from mania 96 Martin Huisman sees the story of Saul as illustrative of the role of stress as a factor in depression 97 Liubov Ben Noun of Ben Gurion University of the Negev believes that passages referring to King Saul s disturbed behavior indicate he was afflicted by a mental disorder and lists a number of possible conditions 98 However Christopher C H Cook of the Department of Theology and Religion Durham University UK recommends caution in offering any diagnoses in relation to people who lived millennia ago 99 See also EditDavid in Islam Kings of Israel and Judah Midrash Samuel Paul the Apostle also named Saul of Tarsus as a Pharisee References Edit Garfinkel Yosef Ganor Saar Hasel Michael G 2018 In the Footsteps of King David Revelations from an Ancient Biblical City Thames amp Hudson p 182 ISBN 978 0 50077428 1 Archived from the original on 2020 10 11 Retrieved 2020 10 05 Avioz Michael 2015 Josephus Interpretation of the Books of Samuel Bloomsbury p 99 ISBN 9780567458575 Archived from the original on 2020 10 11 Retrieved 2020 10 04 a b c d e Finkelstein Israel 2006 The Last Labayu King Saul and the Expansion of the First North Israelite Territorial Entity In Amit Yairah Ben Zvi Ehud Finkelstein Israel et al eds Essays on Ancient Israel in Its Near Eastern Context A Tribute to Nadav Naʼaman Eisenbrauns pp 171 ff ISBN 9781575061283 Retrieved 2016 03 02 Van der Toorn Karel 1993 Saul and the rise of Israelite state religion Vetus Testamentum XLIII 4 519 542 JSTOR 1518499 a b Baruch Halpern 2003 David s Secret Demons Messiah Murderer Traitor King Wm B Eerdmans pp 208 211 a b Jacobs Joseph Price Ira Maurice Singer Isidore Lauterbach Jacob Zallel 1906 Saul Jewish Encyclopedia Retrieved 15 September 2014 1 Samuel 14 51 lists three sons Jonathan and Ishvi and Malchi shua and the two daughters But see also 2 Samuel 2 8 and 1 Chronicles 8 33 2 Samuel 21 8 1 Samuel 31 3 6 1 Chronicles 10 3 6 2 Samuel 21 14 1 Samuel 31 2 1 Chronicles 10 2 2 Samuel 4 5 2 Samuel 21 1 6 Ellenson David 2004 After Emancipation Jewish Religious Responses to Modernity Hebrew Union College Press p 422 ISBN 0878202234 2 Samuel 21 8 9 2 Samuel 21 8 9 2 Samuel 21 10 2 Samuel 21 13 14 2 Samuel 6 23 2 Samuel 4 4 2 Samuel 9 7 13 2 Samuel 9 12 1 Chronicles 8 35 38 1 Samuel 9 a b Driscoll James F 1912 Saul The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 13 New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 15 September 2014 1 Samuel 8 Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 1 Samuel 10 accessed 1 May 2017 1 Samuel 10 17 24 a b Saul First King of Israel Chabad org 1 Samuel 11 a b King Saul Pulpit Commentary on 1 Samuel 10 accessed 1 May 2017 1 Samuel 19 24 1 Samuel 14 47 1 Samuel 14 47 New Living Translation other translations vary Benson Commentary on 1 Samuel 14 accessed 7 May 2017 1 Samuel 14 24 45 1 Samuel 15 3 Deuteronomy 25 19 1 Samuel 15 33 35 Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges on 1 Samuel 16 accessed 12 May 2017 1 Samuel 16 14 23 1 Samuel 16 20 a donkey loaded with bread a skin of wine and a young goat 1 Samuel 17 15 suggests David only attended court periodically 1 Samuel 17 1 18 5 1 Samuel 18 7 recurring in 1 Samuel 21 11 and 1 Samuel 29 5 1 Samuel 18 ESV David and Jonathan s Friendship Bible Gateway Retrieved 15 September 2014 1 Samuel 19 1 7 Kent Grenville 2014 01 01 Call up Samuel Who Appeared to the Witch at En Dor 1 Samuel 28 3 25 Andrews University Seminary Studies AUSS 52 2 ISSN 0003 2980 Meier Samuel A 2006 The Sword From Saul to David In Ehrlich Carl S White Marsha C eds Saul in Story and Tradition Mohr Siebeck p 160 ISBN 978 3 16 148569 5 17 Of the two conflicting accounts of Saul s death in 1 Samuel 31 and 2 Samuel 1 Nicholson Ernest February 2014 Deuteronomy and the Judaean Diaspora OUP Oxford p 162 ISBN 978 0 19 870273 3 What thematic purpose is served however and how is the unity of the narrative advanced by two conflicting accounts of Saul s death what has a twofold account of this incident to do with the legitimizing of David and how does it place Saul in an unfavourable light Bregman Lucy 2010 Religion Death and Dying Vol 3 ABC CLIO p 106 ISBN 978 0 313 35180 8 The Bible is clear that King Saul died by suicide however it contains conflicting accounts of the particulars 1 Samuel 31 8 13 1 Chronicles 10 12 2 Samuel 21 12 14 G Darshan The Reinterment of Saul and Jonathan s Bones II Sam 21 12 14 in Light of Ancient Greek Hero Cult Stories ZAW 125 4 2013 640 645 1 Chronicles 10 13 14 The idea was originally advanced in the 19th century and has most recently been elaborated in Kyle McCarter s influential commentary on I Samuel P Kyle McCarter I Samuel A New Translation with Introduction Notes and Commentary Anchor Bible Series 1980 Hayes Christine Introduction to the Old Testament Hebrew Bible Lecture 13 The Deuteronomistic History Prophets and Kings 1 and 2 Samuel Yale Open Courses Yale University Retrieved 2016 03 02 1 Samuel 9 16 1 Samuel 10 1 Bright John A History of Israel The Westminster Press Philadelphia 1972 p 185 1 Samuel 11 15 a b Bill T Arnold 1989 The Amalekite report of Saul s death political intrigue or incompatible sources PDF Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society 32 3 289 298 Life Application Study Bible Note on 2 Samuel 1 13 Numbers Rabbah 9 28 Genesis Rabbah 25 3 Leviticus Rabbah 9 2 1 Samuel 10 16 Megillah 13b Moed Kattan 16b Exodus Rabbah 30 12 Yoma 22b Berachot 48b Deuteronomy 21 1 9 Yoma 22b Numbers Rabbah 1 10 Yoma 22b Moed Kattan 16b and Rashi ad loc 2 Samuel 21 17 Leviticus Rabbah 26 7 Yalkut Shimoni Samuel 138 Yalkut Shimoni Samuel 138 cf 1 Samuel 14 34 1 Samuel 13 22 Deuteronomy Rabbah 5 10 1 Samuel 22 16 19 Yalkut Shimoni Samuel 131 Berachot 12b a b Numbers Rabbah 8 4 Sanhedrin 19b Eruvin 53b The Holy Quran www alislam org a b c Quran 3Averse 3D246 2 246 252 Leaman Oliver The Quran An Encyclopedia 2006 p 638 Judges vii 5 7 Nelson Richard D Historical Roots of the Old Testament 1200 63 BCE Volume 13 of Biblical Encyclopedia Society of Biblical Lit 2014 ISBN 9781628370065 Dever William G 2020 08 18 Has Archaeology Buried the Bible Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 1 4674 5949 5 Halpern Baruch 2003 11 12 David s Secret Demons Messiah Murderer Traitor King Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 8028 2797 5 Mazar Amihai 2014 Archaeology and the Bible Reflections on Historical Memory in the Deuteronomistic History Congress Volume Munich 2013 347 369 doi 10 1163 9789004281226 015 ISBN 9789004281226 Lipschits Oded 2014 The history of Israel in the biblical period In Berlin Adele Brettler Marc Zvi eds The Jewish Study Bible 2nd ed Oxford University Press pp 2107 2119 ISBN 978 0 19 997846 5 As this essay will show however the premonarchic period long ago became a literary description of the mythological roots the early beginnings of the nation and the way to describe the right of Israel on its land The archeological evidence also does not support the existence of a united monarchy under David and Solomon as described in the Bible so the rubric of united monarchy is best abandoned although it remains useful for discussing how the Bible views the Israelite past Although the kingdom of Judah is mentioned in some ancient inscriptions they never suggest that it was part of a unit comprised of Israel and Judah There are no extrabiblical indications of a united monarchy called Israel Maeir Aren M 2014 Archeology and the Hebrew Bible In Berlin Adele Brettler Marc Zvi eds The Jewish Study Bible 2nd ed Oxford University Press p 2125 ISBN 978 0 19 997846 5 Archeological evidence for the early stages of the monarchy is minimal at best In any case the lack of substantive epigraphic materials from this early stage of the Iron Age II after 1000 BCE and other extensive archeological evidence indicate that even if an early united monarchy existed its level of political and bureaucratic complexity was not as developed as the biblical text suggests The mention of the House of David in the Tel Dan inscription which dates to the mid late 9th c BCE does not prove the existence of an extensive Davidic kingdom in the early 10th c BCE but does indicate a Judean polity during the 9th c that even then associated its origin with David Although there is archeological and historical evidence from extra biblical documents supporting various events of the monarchical period esp the later period recorded in the Bible there is little if any evidence corroborating the biblical depiction of early Israelite or Judean history Dever William G 2020 08 18 Has Archaeology Buried the Bible Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 1 4674 5949 5 Finkelstein s low chronology never followed by a majority of mainstream scholars is a house of cards Yet it is the only reason for attributing our copious tenth century BCE archaeological evidence of a united monarchy to the ninth century BCE Finkelstein himself seems to have doubts Originally he insisted that no Judean state emerged until the eighth century BCE Then it was the ninth century BCE Eventually he posited a tenth century BCE Saulide polity with its hub at Gibeon not Jerusalem and not Solomon only his predecessor But there is absolutely no archaeological evidence for such an imaginary kingdom Finkelstein s radical scenario is clever but not convincing It should be ignored The reigns of Saul David and Solomon are reasonably well attested Mazar Amihai 2014 Archaeology and the Bible Reflections on Historical Memory in the Deuteronomistic History Congress Volume Munich 2013 347 369 doi 10 1163 9789004281226 015 ISBN 9789004281226 The continuous debate concerning the evaluation of the United Monarchy as an historical entity cannot be resolved unequivocally by archaeology due to the current disagreements among archaeologists regarding the interpretation of the evidence In my view when taking into account the combined evidence presented above as well as in previous papers we cannot simply deny the existence of such an entity How to define and explain this state in the tenthcentury is a matter of debate In previous papers I explained David s kingdom as a tribal state that emerged at a time of political vacuum in most of the southern Levant caused by the great weakness of the earlier Canaanite population and the increase in the Israelite population in the highlands This background combined with personal qualities and a small but effective milittary force may have enabled David to create a substantial political and military power which may have included large parts of the country Stein George 2011 The case of King Saul Did he have recurrent unipolar depression or bipolar affective disorder British Journal of Psychiatry 198 3 212 doi 10 1192 bjp 198 3 212 Huisman M 2007 King Saul work related stress and depression Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 61 10 890 doi 10 1136 jech 2007 066522 PMC 2652967 PMID 17873225 Louba Ben Noun Liubov 2003 What was the Mental Disease that Afflicted King Saul Clinical Case Studies 2 4 270 282 doi 10 1177 1534650103256296 S2CID 220300173 Cook Christopher C H 2012 Psychiatry in scripture Sacred texts and psychopathology The Psychiatrist 36 6 225 229 doi 10 1192 pb bp 111 036418 Bibliography EditDriver S R Notes on the Hebrew Text of the Books of Samuel 1890 Cheyne T K Aids to the Devout Study of Criticism 1892 pp 1 126 Kent Grenville J R 2014 01 01 Call up Samuel Who Appeared to the Witch at En Dor 1 Samuel 28 3 25 Andrews University Seminary Studies AUSS 52 2 ISSN 0003 2980 Smith H P Old Testament History 1903 ch vii Cheyne T K and Black eds Encyclopedia Biblica SAMUEL AND SAUL A NEGATIVE SYMBIOSIS by Rabbi Moshe Reiss Hudson J Francis Rabshakeh Lion Publishing 1992 is a fictionalisation of Saul s tragedy Green A King Saul The True History of the First Messiah Lutterworth Press 2007 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Joseph Jacobs Ira Maurice Price Isidore Singer and Jacob Zallel Lauterbach 1901 1906 Saul In Singer Isidore et al eds The Jewish Encyclopedia New York Funk amp Wagnalls a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links Edit Media related to Saul Biblical figure at Wikimedia CommonsSaul of the United Kingdom of Israel amp JudahHouse of SaulCadet branch of the Tribe of BenjaminRegnal titlesNew titleAnointed king toreplace Judge Samuel King of the United Kingdomof Israel and Judah1047 1007 BCE Succeeded byIsh bosheth Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saul amp oldid 1149573503, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.