Verses 1–3
Introduction
1 Samuel 15 is in a way the last chapter about Saul. Here the king himself is rejected after the kingdom has previously been taken from him (1 Samuel 13:14). With 1 Samuel 16 begins a new phase in God’s people, in which David is in the foreground.
God does not simply push Saul aside. The kingdom may be taken away from him, but his person gets another chance. God does this by giving him a task that is easy to carry out. He must completely destroy an archenemy of Israel. Anyone who loves God and His people must hate this terrible enemy. Whoever thinks like God should not have the slightest difficulty in exercising this judgment on Amalek. God gives Saul this new, but at the same time last chance. Unfortunately, we will see that Saul fails.
The task can be simple, but at the same time is serious. To see the seriousness of it and to realize that the consequences of failure are serious, we need to know who Amalek is. Amalek is mentioned for the first time in Exodus 17 (Exodus 17:8). There he attacks Israel as soon as the people are delivered from Egypt. It is the first enemy the delivered people will face. Amalek attacks the place where God’s people are weakest and when they are exhausted. In Amalek we can see a picture of the flesh and of Satan, who controls the flesh.
God has announced that He will destroy Amalek (Exodus 17:14). But God also has patience with Amalek. In the book of Numbers, we find a second clue of the judgment on Amalek (Numbers 24:7). The downfall of Amalek is related there to the arrival of the great King. As a foreshadowing thereof David, and not Saul, will completely defeat Amalek. Thus will the Lord Jesus let cast the devil into the abyss and accept His reign (Revelation 20:1-Joshua :). In his farewell speech Moses recalls the extermination of Amalek (Deuteronomy 25:19). As Moses points out, the picture shows that the flesh will work easily and that we will then be an easy prey for Satan when we are weak.
The Command to Exterminate Amalek
Samuel comes to Saul. He first reminds Saul of his anointing. This anointing was not Samuel’s own initiative. He anointed Saul on the explicit command of the LORD. Anointing is done with a view to a service for the LORD, to which obedience to the words of God is directly linked. Samuel says directly to Saul that he must listen to the words of God.
Anointing and obedience to God’s Word belong together. That also applies to us. We are anointed as well, with the Holy Spirit. We may be held accountable for what we are.
Samuel passes on the words of the LORD who presents Himself as the LORD of His hosts. He gave Saul command of the Israel’s hosts. He is the true King, both over all that is on earth and over the hosts and a kingdom higher than the earth. He reminds Saul of what Amalek did to Israel and how He judges that (Deuteronomy 25:17-Job :). Amalek stood in Israel’s way when the people were freed from Egypt by him.
God has long patience with His enemies and those of His people, but once comes the reckoning. Now the judgment must be exercised, and that judgment must be total. Nothing but the absolute authority of God justifies this judgment. This fight will not enrich Israel: all people and animals must be killed.