Verses 1–9
Second Samuel - Chapter 21
(This chapter also contains commentary on 1 Chronicles)
The Wrong Solution to a Problem, vs. 1-9
Some scholars believe this event of David’s reign is out of its chronological setting, and that it occurred earlier than it appears, closer to the time of Saul’s reign. It is another example of David’s failure to always see the will of the Lord in his decisions. In fact, except for the initial event David’s handling of the Gibeonite affair is a series of errors to the end. It is rather in keeping with the error of Joshua and the elders in Israel’s first encounter with the Gibeonites (Joshua 9:1 ff). David leaned on his own understanding (Proverbs 3:5).
The (amine which came on the land persisted for three years before David ever sought the Lord to find out the reason. He was informed that it was for the bloody house of Saul because he had slain the Gibeonites contrary to the oath Joshua and the elders had sworn to them. While it is debatable whether the Israelites were originally bound by the oath which they made, which was contrary to God’s command relative to extinction of the Canaanites, they had honored it for many years. The Gibeonites had become servants of the tabernacle and the priests, and seem to have become adherents to Israel’s God.
The reason for Saul’s attempted extinction of the Gibeonites is said to have been his zeal to the children of Israel and Judah, or a desire to rid the land of all who were not of Israel and Judah. Saul may have felt vengeful toward the Gibeonites, as servants of the tabernacle, because of his animosity toward the priests, whom he slaughtered for their befriending David in his flight (1 Samuel 22:6 ff).
It is certainly strange that David would seek the Lord to know the reason for the famine, then not ask His. will concerning the remedy. Instead of this, however, he called in the Gibeonites and asked them what he should do, and agreeing before hand to do whatever they required. The Gibeonites did not ask for silver and gold, nor that the Israelites be slain for the crime, but that David surrender to them seven sons of Saul that they might hang them and make public display of their bodies in their own hometown of Gibeah.
True to his promise David rounded up seven sons and grandsons of Saul and turned them over to the Gibeonites for execution. Yet David would not give up Mephibosheth, the son of Jonathan, because of the treaty of friendship he had made with Jonathan before he became king. He did give two of Saul’s sons by Rizpah, Armoni and another Mephibosheth, and five sons of Adriel who had been married to Merab, the eldest daughter of Saul (1 Samuel 18:19). However these sons had been brought up by Michal, Merab’s younger sister, for Adriel. Michal had no children (2 Samuel 6:23), and Merab must have died when the children were small, so Michal took them and reared them. The Gibeonites took them and slew all seven as the barley harvest was beginning.