Verses 1–14
Second Samuel - Chapter 17
Hushai Versus Ahithophel, vs. 1-14
Ahithophel moved to take charge of the rebellion, with a plan to bring it to a swift conclusion. His proposal was logical and would have likely been a wise one had it been in the will of God. He wished to take twelve thousand men and follow David and his men that very night, while they were very near the city and exhausted from their flight. The sudden appearance of a large army would throw them into great fright, so that the people would be likely to flee, hopefully to save their lives, leaving the king undefended. Ahithophel would then slay David, round up the people, and return with them to Jerusalem. So the rebellion would have succeeded and Absalom become king.
Absalom and all the leaders of the rebellion were very well pleased with the scheme of Ahithophel. However they remembered that Hushai was the intimate friend of David and would likely be able to advise them in things of which they would not ordinarily be aware. So they called him to hear the proposal of Ahithophel and to pass his judgment on it. Hushai used subtlety in his reply, for he knew that Ahithophel’s counsel was good and could be calculated to succeed if carried out. So he began by admitting that it was a good plan, but not for immediate use.
In making his response Hushai reminded the elders and Absalom of some well-known facts which required further consideration. First 1) David and his men would be angry and spoiling for a fight; 2) David being a man of war would not be among the people, but hidden against just such a contingency as Ahithophel had proposed; 3) vigorous fighting by the able men around David would surely result in overthrowing a great number of Absalom’s men with the result that others would be disheartened and afraid; 4) all the mighty men, the Cherethites and Pelethites, and the Gittites were with David, and were men of renown, proven on the field of battle, and able to withstand many times their own number.
There was certainly logic on the side of Hushai also, but many of his conclusions were based on speculation only. Actually such was not the case with David in his camp. Thus Hushai hastened to put forth a counter-plan which might be thought more feasible than that of Ahithophel by Absalom and the men of Israel. He proposed that David could be overcome by sheer numbers. Absalom had cause to believe that Israel was turning to him completely, that David would have so few followers he could not hope to hold out. Hushai suggested they would fall upon David wherever he was, like dew on the grass, and overwhelm him so that he would have none left. If he should succeed in getting inside a walled city there would be so many of Absalom’s followers they would be able to go there and take it apart stone by stone, until the defense was removed.
Hushai had presented a plan which seemed to involve less risk, and it appealed to Absalom and his men. Thus they concluded that the counsel of Hushai was better than that of Ahithophel. Logically compared it is really not hard to see that Ahithophel’s counsel was much more likely to succeed than that of Hushai. But the pride of Absalom and his men blinded them in the self deceit that ail of Israel would without fail acclaim him king and that David’s following would melt away. God used this weakness of Absalom to cause his fall, in making him and his captains conclude the superiority of Hushai’s counsel over that of Ahithophel.