When Samuel went to anoint
the person who was to be king after Saul, he first saw Jesse’s son Eliab and
thought that surely the Lord had chosen Eliab. But the Lord told Samuel to not judge by the countenance or
height and that the Lord had refused Eliab.
I think it is interesting to
see how Eliab treats David later when David comes to take supplies to his
brothers in Saul’s army. While
David is offended for Israel’s sake that a Philistine has defied Israel and God
for so long, Eliab seems to think David is an obnoxious pipsqueak. Theirs is this interesting exchange
between Eliab and David that reveals their character so well.
28 ¶And
Eliab his eldest brother heard when he spake unto the men; and Eliab’s anger
was kindled against David, and he said, Why camest thou down hither? and with
whom hast thou left those few sheep in the wilderness? I know thy pride, and
the naughtiness of thine heart; for thou art come down that thou mightest see
the battle.
29 And
David said, What have I now done? Is there not a cause?
30 ¶And
he turned from him toward another, and spake after the same manner: and the
people answered him again after the former manner. (1 Samuel 17:28-30)
Based upon what Eliab says,
you can see he doesn’t take very kindly to criticism, even indirectly. David’s questioning why this Goliath
thing has gone on for so long is taken by Eliab as a rebuke that he should at least have done something,
since he was with the army. (Not
that David really meant that, but Eliab may have felt it that way.)
So Eliab tries to defend
himself by attacking David and basically smearing him in front of the other men
with this family dialogue that makes it seem like David is 1) irresponsible for
leaving the sheep, 2) of no account (because he says there are only a few
sheep), 3) proud 4) naughty (or disobedient) 5) nosy and 6) a risk-taker for
coming down to see a battle that is none of his business and which could be
dangerous to him.
What a list of false
accusations! And Eliab knows they are false too because we can
read earlier in the chapter that David had time to talk to his brothers before
the Goliath thing came up, so Eliab would have known that David came at the
request of his father (and no doubt would have provided a substitute to take
care of the sheep while he was gone), that he brought supplies (so there was a purpose for his coming), that he
took care of getting the supplies to the right place before he found his brothers to talk (so he was responsible).
Eliab just said those things to try to make David look bad in front of
everyone.
That’s mean old brother
behavior, even when grown up! Just
from that, you can tell Eliab wouldn’t be a very nice king. 1) He made false accusations when he
knows the real facts 2) he tried to discredit a younger brother, a family
member 3) he tried to stamp out David’s faithful and intrepid perspective just
because Eliab didn’t have it in him and 4) he got defensive from the most
indirect of unintended criticisms.
On the other hand, David’s
behavior is excellent. Even when
he’s made to look bad, all he says is, “What have I now done? Is there not a cause?” (v29). He pleads innocence, but doesn’t attack
back. He also doesn’t allow
himself to be deterred from asking his questions. He doesn’t let himself get shut up by his older brother.
As an oldest child, I learn
from this that it is important to not shut down good and faithful suggestions
from my younger siblings. I
also learn from David appropriate ways to respond if others are trying to shut me down.
Is there anything else in
addition that you learn from this?
2 comments:
I love this!! I think there is much we can learn from David. Its important not to bring others down, and I love seeing David's character come shining through in this story.
Good point about not bringing others down, Bonnie.
Thanks for visiting.
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