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			 DAVID 
			2. HIS PERSONAL HISTORY 
			IN order to understand why the chronicler entirely recasts the 
			graphic and candid history of David given in the book of Samuel, we 
			have to consider the place that David had come to fill in Jewish 
			religion. It seems probable that among the sources used by the 
			author of the book of Samuel was a history of David, written not 
			long after his death, by some one familiar with the inner life of 
			the court. "No one," says the proverb, "is a hero to his valet"; 
			very much what a valet is to a private gentleman courtiers are to a 
			king: their knowledge of their master approaches to the familiarity 
			which breeds contempt. Not that David was ever a subject for 
			contempt or less than a hero even to his own courtiers: but they 
			knew him as a very human hero, great in his vices as well as in his 
			virtues, daring in battle and wise in counsel, sometimes also 
			reckless in sin, yet capable of unbounded repentance, loving not 
			wisely, but too well. And as they knew him, so they described him; 
			and their picture is an immortal possession for all students of 
			sacred life and literature. But it is not the portrait of a Messiah; 
			when we think of the "Son of David," we do not want to be reminded 
			of Bathsheba. 
			 
			During the six or seven centuries that elapsed between the death of 
			David and the chronicler the name of David had come to have a 
			symbolic meaning, which was largely independent of the personal 
			character and career of the actual king. His reign had become 
			idealized by the magic of antiquity; it was a glory of "the good old 
			times." His own sins and failures were obscured by the crimes and 
			disasters of later kings. And yet, in spite of all its shortcomings, 
			the "house of David" still remained the symbol alike of ancient 
			glory and of future hopes. We have seen from the genealogies how 
			intimate the connection was between the family and its founder. 
			Ephraim and Benjamin may mean either patriarchs or tribes. A Jew was 
			not always anxious to distinguish between the family and the 
			founder. "David" and "the house of David" became almost 
			interchangeable terms. 
			 
			Even the prophets of the eighth century connect the future destiny 
			of Israel with David and his house. The child, of whom Isaiah 
			prophesied, was to sit "upon the throne of David" and be "over his 
			kingdom, to establish it and to uphold it with judgment and with 
			righteousness from henceforth even forever." {Isa 9:7} And, again, 
			the king who is to "sit in truth judging, and seeking judgment, and 
			swift to do righteousness," is to have "his throne established in 
			mercy in the tent of David." When {Isa 16:5} Sennacherib attacked 
			Jerusalem, the city was defended {Isa 37:35} for Jehovah’s own sake 
			and for His servant David’s sake. In the word of the Lord that came 
			to Isaiah for Hezekiah, David supersedes, as it were, the sacred 
			fathers of the Hebrew race; Jehovah is not spoken of as "the God of 
			Abraham, Isaac and Jacob," but "the God of David." {Isa 38:5} As 
			founder of the dynasty, he takes rank with thefounders of the race 
			and religion of Israel: he is "the patriarch David." {Act 2:29} The 
			northern prophet Hosea looks forward to the time when the children 
			of Israel shall return, and seek the Lord "their God and David their 
			king"; {Hos 3:5} when Amos wishes to set forth the future prosperity 
			of Israel, he says that the Lord "will raise up the tabernacle of 
			David"; {Amo 9:11} in Micah "the ruler in Israel" is to come forth 
			from Bethlehem Ephrathah, the birthplace of David; {Mic 5:2} in 
			Jeremiah such references to David are frequent, the most 
			characteristic being those relating to the "righteous branch, whom 
			the Lord will raise up unto David," who "shall reign as king and 
			deal wisely, and shall execute judgment and justice in the land, in 
			whose days Judah shall be saved, and Israel shall dwell safely"; in 
			Ezekiel "My servant David" is to be the shepherd and prince of 
			Jehovah’s restored and reunited people; {Eze 34:23-24} Zechariah, 
			writing at what we may consider the beginning of the chronicler’s 
			own period, follows the language of his predecessors: he applies 
			Jeremiah’s prophecy of "the righteous branch" to Zerubbabel, the 
			prince of the house of David: similarly in Haggai Zerubbabel is the 
			chosen of Jehovah; {Hag 2:23} in the appendix to Zechariah it is 
			said that when "the Lord defends the inhabitants of Jerusalem the 
			house of David shall be as God, as the angel of the Lord before 
			them." {Zec 12:8} In the later literature, Biblical and apocryphal, 
			the Davidic origin of the Messiah is not conspicuous till it 
			reappears in the Psalms of Solomon and the New Testament, but the 
			idea had not necessarily been dormant meanwhile. The chronicler and 
			his school studied and meditated on the sacred writings, and must 
			have been familiar with this doctrine of the prophets. The interest 
			in such a subject would not be confined to scholars. Doubtless the 
			downtrodden people cherished with ever-growing ardor the glorious 
			picture of the Davidic king. In the synagogues it was not only 
			Moses, but the Prophets, that were read; and they could never allow 
			the picture of the Messianic king to grow faint and pale. 
			 
			David’s name was also familiar as the author of many psalms. The 
			inhabitants of Jerusalem would often hear them sung at the Temple, 
			and they were probably used for private devotion. In this way 
			especially the name of David had become associated with the deepest 
			and purest spiritual experiences. 
			 
			This brief survey shows how utterly impossible it was for the 
			chronicler to transfer the older narrative bodily from the book of 
			Samuel to his own pages. Large omissions were absolutely necessary. 
			He could not sit down in cold blood to tell his readers that the man 
			whose name they associated with the most sacred memories and the 
			noblest hopes of Israel had been guilty of treacherous murder, and 
			had offered himself to the Philistines as an ally against the people 
			of Jehovah. 
			 
			From this point of view let us consider the chronicler’s omissions 
			somewhat more in detail. In the first place, with one or two slight 
			exceptions, he omits the whole of David’s life before his accession 
			to the throne, for two reasons: partly because he is anxious that 
			his readers should think of David as king, the anointed of Jehovah, 
			the Messiah; partly that they may not be reminded of his career as 
			an outlaw and a freebooter and of his alliance with the Philistines. 
			It is probably only an unintentional result of this omission that it 
			enables the chronicler to ignore the important services rendered to 
			David by Abiathar, whose family were rivals of the house of Zadok in 
			the priesthood. 
			 
			We have already seen that the events of David’s reign at Hebron and 
			his struggle with Ishbosheth are omitted because the chronicler does 
			not recognize Ishbosheth as a legitimate king. The omission would 
			also commend itself because this section contains the account of 
			Joab’s murder of Abner and David’s inability to do more than protest 
			against the crime. "I am this day weak, though anointed king; and 
			these men the sons of Zeruiah are too hard for me," {2Sa 3:39} are 
			scarcely words that become an ideal king. 
			 
			The next point to notice is one of those significant alterations 
			that mark the chronicler’s industry as a redactor. In 2Sa 5:21 we 
			read that after the Philistines had been defeated at Baal-perazim 
			they left their images there, and David and his men took them away. 
			Why did they take them away? What did David and his men want with 
			images? Missionaries bring home images as trophies, and exhibit them 
			triumphantly, like soldiers who have captured the enemy’s standards. 
			No one, not even an unconverted native, supposes that they have been 
			brought away to be used in worship. 
			 
			But the worship of images was no improbable apostasy on the part of 
			an Israelite king. The chronicler felt that these ambiguous words 
			were open to misconstruction; so he tells us what he assumes to have 
			been their ultimate fate: "And they left their gods there; and David 
			gave commandment, and they were burnt with fire." {2Sa 5:21 1Ch 
			14:12} 
			 
			The next omission was obviously a necessary one; it is the incident 
			of Uriah and Bathsheba. The name Bathsheba never occurs in 
			Chronicles. When it is necessary to mention the mother of Solomon, 
			she is called Bathshua, possibly in order that the disgraceful 
			incident might not be suggested even by the use of the name. The New 
			Testament genealogies differ in this matter in somewhat the same way 
			as Samuel and Chronicles. St. Matthew expressly mentions Uriah’s 
			wife as an ancestress of our Lord, but St. Luke does not mention her 
			or any other ancestress. 
			 
			The next omission is equally extensive and important. It includes 
			the whole series of events connected with the revolt of Absalom, 
			from the incident of Tamar to the suppression of the rebellion of 
			Sheba the son of Bichri. Various motives may have contributed to 
			this omission. The narrative contains unedifying incidents, which 
			are passed over as lightly as possible by modern writers like 
			Stanley. It was probably a relief to the chronicler to be able to 
			omit them altogether. There is no heinous sin like the murder of 
			Uriah, but the story leaves a general impression of great weakness 
			on David’s part. Joab murders Amasa as he had murdered Abner, and 
			this time there is no record of any protest even on the part of 
			David. But probably the main reason for the omission of this 
			narrative is that it mars the ideal picture of David’s power and 
			dignity and the success and prosperity of his reign. 
			 
			The touching story of Rizpah is omitted; the hanging of her sons 
			does not exhibit David in a very amiable light. The Gibeonites 
			propose that "they shall hang them up unto the Lord in Gibeah of 
			Saul, the chosen of the Lord," and David accepts the proposal. This 
			punishment of the children for the sin of their father was expressly 
			against the Law and the whole incident was perilously akin to human 
			sacrifice. How could they be hung up before Jehovah in Gibeah unless 
			there was a sanctuary of Jehovah in Gibeah? And why should Saul at 
			such a time and in such a connection be called emphatically "the 
			chosen of Jehovah"? On many grounds, it was a passage which the 
			chronicler would be glad to omit. 
			 
			2Sa 21:15-17 we are told that David waxed faint and had to be 
			rescued by Abishai. This is omitted by Chronicles probably because 
			it detracts from the character of David as the ideal hero. The next 
			paragraph in Samuel also tended to depreciate David’s prowess. It 
			stated that Goliath was slain by Elhanan. The chronicler introduces 
			a correction. It was not Goliath whom Elhanan slew, but Lahmi, the 
			brother of Goliah. However, the text in Samuel is evidently corrupt; 
			and possibly this is one of the cases in which Chronicles has 
			preserved the correct text. {2Sa 21:19 1Ch 20:5} 
			 
			Then follow two omissions that are not easily accounted for 2 Samuel 
			22,23, contain two psalms, Psalms 18, and "the Last Words of David," 
			the latter not included in the Psalter. These psalms are generally 
			considered a late addition to the book of Samuel, and it is barely 
			possible that they were not in the copy used by the chronicler; but 
			the late date of Chronicles makes against this supposition. The 
			psalms may be omitted for the sake of brevity, and yet elsewhere a 
			long cento of passages from post-Exilic psalms is added to the 
			material derived from the book of Samuel. Possibly something in the 
			omitted section jarred upon the theological sensibilities of the 
			chronicler, but it is not clear what. He does not as a rule look 
			below the surface for obscure suggestions of undesirable views. The 
			grounds of his alterations and omissions are usually sufficiently 
			obvious; but these particular omissions are not at present 
			susceptible of any obvious explanation. Further research into the 
			theology of Judaism may perhaps provide us with one hereafter. 
			 
			Finally, the chronicler omits the attempt of Adonijah to seize the 
			throne, and David’s dying commands to Solomon. The opening chapters 
			of the book of Kings present a graphic and pathetic picture of the 
			closing scenes of David’s life. The king is exhausted with old age. 
			His authoritative sanction to the coronation of Solomon is only 
			obtained when he has been roused and directed by the promptings and 
			suggestions of the women of his harem. The scene is partly a 
			parallel and partly a contrast to the last days of Queen Elizabeth; 
			for when her bodily strength failed, the obstinate Tudor spirit 
			refused to be guided by the suggestions of her courtiers. The 
			chronicler was depicting a person of almost Divine dignity, in whom 
			incidents of human weakness would have been out of keeping; and 
			therefore they are omitted. 
			 
			David’s charge to Solomon is equally human. Solomon is to make up 
			for David’s weakness and undue generosity by putting Joab and Shimei 
			to death; on the other hand, he is to pay David’s debt of gratitude 
			to the son of Barzillai. But the chronicler felt that David’s mind 
			in those last days must surely have been occupied with the temple 
			which Solomon was to build, and the less edifying charge is omitted. 
			 
			Constantine is reported to have said that, for the honor of the 
			Church, he would conceal the sin of a bishop with his own imperial 
			purple. David was more to the chronicler than the whole Christian 
			episcopate to Constantine. His life of David is compiled in the 
			spirit and upon the principles of lives of saints generally, and his 
			omissions are made in perfect good faith. 
			 
			Let us now consider the positive picture of David as it is drawn for 
			us in Chronicles. Chronicles would be published separately, each 
			copy written, out on a roll of its own. There may have been Jews who 
			had Chronicles, hut not Samuel and Kings, and who knew nothing about 
			David except what they learned from Chronicles. Possibly the 
			chronicler and his friends would recommend the work as suitable for 
			the education of children and the instruction of the common people. 
			It would save its readers from being perplexed by the religious 
			difficulties suggested by Samuel and Kings. There were many 
			obstacles, however, to the success of such a scheme; the 
			persecutions of Antiochus and the wars of the Maccabees took the 
			leadership out of the hands of scholars and gave it to soldiers and 
			statesmen. The latter perhaps felt more drawn to the real David than 
			to the ideal, and the new priestly dynasty would not be anxious to 
			emphasize the Messianic hopes of the house of David. But let us put 
			ourselves for a moment in the position of a student of Hebrew 
			history who reads of David for the first time in Chronicles and has 
			no other source of information. 
			 
			Our first impression as we read the book is that David comes into 
			the history as abruptly as Elijah or Melchizedek. Jehovah slew Saul 
			"and turned the kingdom unto David the son of Jesse." {1Ch 10:14} 
			Apparently the Divine appointment is promptly and enthusiastically 
			accepted by the nation; all the twelve tribes come at once in their 
			tens and hundreds of thousands to Hebron to make David king. They 
			then march straight to Jerusalem and take it by storm, and forthwith 
			attempt to bring up the Ark to Zion. An unfortunate accident 
			necessitates a delay of three months, but at the end of that time 
			the Ark is solemnly installed in a tent at Jerusalem. {Cf. 1Ch 
			11:1-9; 1Ch 12:23; 1Ch 13:14} 
			 
			We are not told who David the son of Jesse was, or why the Divine 
			choice fell upon him or how he had been prepared for his responsible 
			position, or how he had so commended himself to Israel as to be 
			accepted with universal acclaim. He must however, have been of noble 
			family and high character; and it is hinted that he had had a 
			distinguished career as a soldier. {1Ch 11:2} We should expect to 
			find his name in the introductory genealogies: and if we have read 
			these lists of names with conscientious attention, we shall remember 
			that there are sundry incidental references to David, and that he 
			was the seventh son of Jesse, {1Ch 2:15} who was descended from the 
			Patriarch Judah, though Boaz, the husband of Ruth. 
			 
			As we read further we come to other references which throw some 
			light on David’s early career, and at the same time somewhat mar the 
			symmetry of the opening narrative. The wide discrepancy between the 
			chronicler’s idea of David and the account given by his authorities 
			prevents him from composing his work on an entirely consecutive and 
			consistent plan. We gather that there was a time when David was in 
			rebellion against his predecessor, and maintained himself at Ziklag 
			and elsewhere, keeping "himself close, because of Saul the son of 
			Kish," and even that he came with the Philistines against Saul to 
			battle, but was prevented by the jealousy of the Philistine chiefs 
			from actually fighting against Saul. There is nothing to indicate 
			the occasion or circumstances of these events. But it appears that 
			even at this period, when David was in arms against the king of 
			Israel and an ally of the Philistines, he was the chosen leader of 
			Israel. Men flocked to him from Judah and Benjamin, Manasseh and 
			Gad, and doubtless from the other tribes as well: "From day to day 
			there came to David to help him, until it was a great host, like the 
			host of God." {1 Chronicles 20} 
			 
			This chapter partly explains David’s popularity after Saul’s death; 
			but it only carries the mystery a stage further back. How did this 
			outlaw, and apparently unpatriotic rebel, get so strong a hold on 
			the affections of Israel? 
			 
			Chapter 12 also provides material for plausible explanations of 
			another difficulty. In chapter 10 the army of Israel is routed, the 
			inhabitants of the land take to flight, and the Philistines occupy 
			their cities; in 11 and 1Ch 12:23-40 all Israel come straightway to 
			Hebron in the most peaceful and unconcerned fashion to make David 
			king. Are we to understand that his Philistine allies, mindful of 
			that "great host, like the host of God," all at once changed their 
			minds and entirely relinquished the fruits of their victory? 
			 
			Elsewhere, however, we find a statement that renders other 
			explanations possible. David reigned seven years in Hebron, {1Ch 
			29:27} so that our first impression as to the rapid sequence of 
			events at the beginning of his reign is apparently not correct, and 
			there was time in these seven years for a more gradual expulsion of 
			the Philistines. It is doubtful, however, whether the chronicler 
			intended his original narrative to be thus modified and interpreted. 
			 
			The main thread of the history is interrupted here and later on {1Ch 
			11:10-47; 1Ch 20:4-8} to insert incidents which illustrate the 
			personal courage and prowess of David and his warriors. We are also 
			told how busily occupied David was during the three months’ sojourn 
			of the Ark in the house of Obededom the Gittite. He accepted an 
			alliance with Hiram, king of Tyre: he added to his harem: he 
			successfully repelled two inroads of the Philistines, and made him 
			houses in the city of David. {1Ch 13:14} 
			 
			The narrative returns to its main subject: the history of the 
			sanctuary at Jerusalem. As soon as the Ark was duly installed in its 
			tent, and David was established in his new palace, he was struck by 
			the contrast between the tent and the palace: "Lo, I dwell in a 
			house of cedar, but the ark of the covenant of the Lord dwelleth 
			under curtains." He proposed to substitute a temple for the tent, 
			but was forbidden by his prophet Nathan, through whom God promised 
			him that his son should build the Temple, and that his house should 
			be established forever. {1 Chronicles 17} 
			 
			Then we read of the wars, victories, and conquests of David. He is 
			no longer absorbed in the defense of Israel against the Philistines. 
			He takes the aggressive and conquers Gath; he conquers Edom, Moab, 
			Ammon, and Amalek; he and his armies defeat the Syrians in several 
			battles, the Syrians become tributary, and David occupies Damascus 
			with a garrison. "And the Lord gave victory to David whithersoever 
			he went." The conquered were treated after the manner of those 
			barbarous times. David and his generals carried off much spoil, 
			especially brass, and silver, and gold; and when he conquered 
			Rabbath, the capital of Ammon, "he brought forth the people that 
			were therein, and cut them with saws, and with harrows of iron, and 
			with axes. And thus did David unto all the cities of the children of 
			Ammon." Meanwhile his home administration was as honorable as his 
			foreign wars were glorious: "He executed judgment and justice unto 
			all his people"; and the government was duly organized with 
			commanders of the host and the bodyguard, with priests and scribes. 
			{1Chronicles 18; 1Ch 20:3} 
			 
			Then follows a mysterious and painful dispensation of Providence, 
			which the historian would gladly have omitted, if his respect for 
			the memory of his hero had not been overruled by his sense of the 
			supreme importance of the Temple. David, like Job, was given over 
			for a season to Satan, and while possessed by this evil spirit 
			displeased God by numbering Israel. His punishment took the form of 
			a great pestilence, which decimated his people, until, by Divine 
			command, David erected an altar in the threshing-floor of Ornan the 
			Jebusite and offered sacrifices upon it, whereupon the plague was 
			stayed. David at once perceived the significance of this incident: 
			Jehovah had indicated the site of the future Temple. "This is the 
			house of Jehovah Elohim, and this is the altar of burnt, offering 
			for Israel." 
			 
			This revelation of the Divine will as to the position of the Temple 
			led David to proceed at once with preparations for its erection by 
			Solomon, which occupied all his energies for the remainder of his 
			life. {1 Chronicles 21-29} He gathered funds and materials, and gave 
			his son full instructions about the building; he organized the 
			priests and Levites, the Temple orchestra and choir, the 
			doorkeepers, treasurers, officers, and judges; he also organized the 
			army, the tribes, and the royal exchequer on the model of the 
			corresponding arrangements for the Temple. 
			 
			Then follows the closing scene of David’s life. The sun of Israel 
			sets amid the flaming glories of the western sky. No clouds or mists 
			rob him of accustomed splendor. David calls a great assembly of 
			princes and warriors; he addresses a solemn exhortation to them and 
			to Solomon; he delivers to his son instructions for "all the works" 
			which "I have been made to understand in writing from the hand of 
			Jehovah." It is almost as though the plans of the Temple had shared 
			with the first tables of stone the honor of being written with the 
			very finger of God Himself, and David were even greater than Moses. 
			He reminds Solomon of all the preparations he had made, and appeals 
			to the princes and the people for further gifts; and they render 
			willingly-thousands of talents of gold, and silver, and brass, and 
			iron. David offers prayer and thanksgiving to the Lord: "And David 
			said to all the congregation, Now bless Jehovah our God. And all the 
			congregation blessed Jehovah, the God of their fathers, and bowed 
			down their heads, and worshipped Jehovah and the king. And they 
			sacrificed sacrifices unto Jehovah, and offered burnt offerings unto 
			Jehovah, on the morrow after that day, even a thousand bullocks, a 
			thousand rams, and a thousand lambs, with their drink offerings and 
			sacrifices in abundance for all Israel, and did eat and drink before 
			Jehovah on that day with great gladness. And they made Solomon king; 
			and David died in a good old age, full of days, riches, and honor, 
			and Solomon his son reigned in his stead." {1Ch 29:20-22; 1Ch 29:28} 
			The Roman expressed his idea of a becoming death more simply: "An 
			emperor should die standing." The chronicler has given us the same 
			view at greater length; this is how the chronicler would have wished 
			to die if he had been David, and how, therefore, he conceives that 
			God honored the last hours of the man after His own heart. 
			 
			It is a strange contrast to the companion picture in the book of 
			Kings. There the king is bedridden, dying slowly of old age; the 
			lifeblood creeps coldly through his veins. The quiet of the 
			sick-room is invaded by the shrill outcry of an aggrieved woman, and 
			the dying king is roused to hear that once more eager hands are 
			clutching at his crown. If the chronicler has done nothing else, he 
			has helped us to appreciate better the gloom and bitterness of the 
			tragedy that was enacted in the last days of David. 
			 
			What idea does Chronicles give us of the man and his character? He 
			is first and foremost a man of earnest piety and deep spiritual 
			feeling. Like the great religions leaders of the chronicler’s own 
			time, his piety found its chief expression in ritual. The main 
			business of his life was to provide for the sanctuary and its 
			services; that is, for the highest fellowship of God and man, 
			according to the ideas then current. But David is no mere formalist; 
			the psalm of thanksgiving for the return of the Ark to Jerusalem is 
			a worthy tribute to the power and faithfulness of Jehovah. {1Ch 
			16:8-36} His prayer after God had promised to establish his dynasty 
			is instinct with devout confidence and gratitude. {1Ch 17:16-27} But 
			the most gracious and appropriate of these Davidic utterances is his 
			last prayer and thanksgiving for the liberal gifts of the people for 
			the Temple. 
			 
			Next to David’s enthusiasm for the Temple, his most conspicuous 
			qualities are those of a general and soldier: he has great personal 
			strength and courage, and is uniformly successful in wars against 
			numerous and powerful enemies; his government is both able and 
			upright; his great powers as an organizer and administrator are 
			exercised both in secular and ecclesiastical matters; in a word, he 
			is in more senses than one an ideal king. 
			 
			Moreover, like Alexander, Marlborough, Napoleon, and other 
			epoch-making conquerors, he had a great charm of personal 
			attractiveness; he inspired his officers and soldiers with 
			enthusiasm and devotion to himself. The pictures of all Israel 
			flocking to him in the first days of his reign and even earlier, 
			when he was an outlaw, are forcible illustrations of this wonderful 
			gift; and the same feature of his character is at once illustrated 
			and partly explained by the romantic episode at Adullam. What 
			greater proof of affection could outlaws give to their captain than 
			to risk their lives to get him a draught of water from the well of 
			Bethlehem? How better could David have accepted and ratified their 
			devotion than by pouring out this water as a most precious libation 
			to God? {1Ch 11:15-19} But the chronicler gives most striking 
			expression to the idea of David’s popularity when he finally tells 
			us in the same breath that the people worshipped Jehovah and the 
			king. {1Ch 29:20} 
			 
			In drawing an ideal picture, our author has naturally omitted 
			incidents that might have revealed the defects of his hero. Such 
			omissions deceive no one, and are not meant to deceive any one. Yet 
			David’s failings are not altogether absent from this history. He has 
			those vices which are characteristic alike of his own age and of the 
			chronicler’s, and which indeed are not yet wholly extinct. He could 
			treat his prisoners with barbarous cruelty. His pride led him to 
			number Israel, but his repentance was prompt and thorough; and the 
			incident brings out alike both his faith in God and his care for his 
			people. When the whole episode is before us, it does not lessen our 
			love and respect for David. The reference to his alliance with the 
			Philistines is vague and incidental. If this were our only account 
			of the matter, we should interpret it by the rest of his life, and 
			conclude that if all the facts were known, they would justify his 
			conduct. 
			 
			In forming a general estimate of David according to Chronicles, we 
			may fairly neglect these less satisfactory episodes. Briefly David 
			is perfect saint and perfect king, beloved of God and man. 
			 
			A portrait reveals the artist as well as the model, and the 
			chronicler in depicting David gives indications of the morality of 
			his own times. We may deduce from his omissions a certain progress 
			in moral sensitiveness. The book of Samuel emphatically condemns 
			David’s treachery towards Uriah, and is conscious of the 
			discreditable nature of many incidents connected with the revolts of 
			Absalom and Adonijah; but the silence of Chronicles implies an even 
			severer condemnation. In other matters, however, the chronicler 
			"judges himself in that which he approveth." {Rom 14:22} Of course 
			the first business of an ancient king was to protect his people from 
			their enemies and to enrich them at the expense of their neighbors. 
			The urgency of these duties may excuse, but not justify, the neglect 
			of the more peaceful departments of the administration. The modern 
			reader is struck by the little stress laid by the narrative upon 
			good government at home; it is just mentioned, and that is about 
			all. As the sentiment of international morality is even now only in 
			its infancy, we cannot wonder at its absence from Chronicles; but we 
			are a little surprised to find that cruelty towards prisoners is 
			included without comment in the character of the ideal king. {2Sa 
			12:31 1Ch 20:3} It is curious that the account in the book of Samuel 
			is slightly ambiguous and might possibly admit of a comparatively 
			mild interpretation; but Chronicles, according to the ordinary 
			translation, says definitely, "He cut them with saws." The mere 
			reproduction of this passage need not imply full and deliberate 
			approval of its contents; but it would not have been allowed to 
			remain in the picture of the ideal king, if the chronicler had felt 
			any strong conviction as to the duty of humanity towards one’s 
			enemies. Unfortunately we know from the book of Esther and elsewhere 
			that later Judaism had not attained to any wide enthusiasm of 
			humanity. 
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