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The king of Israel therefore
inquired of God again concerning the event of the battle; and the high priest
prophesied to him, that he should keep his army in the groves, called the
Groves of Weeping, which were not far from the enemy's camp, and that he
should not move, nor begin to fight, till the trees of the grove should be in
motion without the wind's blowing; but as soon as these trees moved, and the
time foretold to him by God was come, he should, without delay, go out to gain
what was an already prepared and evident victory; for the several ranks of the
enemy's army did not sustain him, but retreated at the first onset, whom he
closely followed, and slew them as he went along, and pursued them to the city
Gaza (which is the limit of their country): after this he spoiled their camp,
in which he found great riches; and he destroyed their gods.
2. When this had proved
the event of the battle, David thought it proper, upon a consultation with the
elders, and rulers, and captains of thousands, to send for those that were in
the flower of their age out of all his countrymen, and out of the whole land,
and withal for the priests and the Levites, in order to their going to
Kirjathjearim, to bring up the ark of God out of that city, and to carry it to
Jerusalem, and there to keep it, and offer before it those sacrifices and those
other honors with which God used to be well-pleased; for had they done thus in
the reign of Saul, they had not undergone any great misfortunes at all. So when
the whole body of the people were come together, as they had resolved to do,
the king came to the ark, which the priest brought out of the house of
Aminadab, and laid it upon a new cart, and permitted their brethren and their
children to draw it, together with the oxen.
Before it went the king, and
the whole multitude of the people with him, singing hymns to God, and making
use of all sorts of songs usual among them, with variety of the sounds of
musical instruments, and with dancing and singing of psalms, as also with the
sounds of trumpets and of cymbals, and so brought the ark to Jerusalem. But as
they were come to the threshing-floor of Chidon, a place so called, Uzzah was
slain by the anger of God; for as the oxen shook the ark, he stretched out his
hand, and would needs take hold of it. Now, because he was not a priest
(7) and yet touched the ark, God struck
him dead. Hereupon both the king and the people were displeased at the death of
Uzzah; and the place where he died is still called the Breach of Uzzah
unto this day.
So David was afraid; and
supposing that if he received the ark to himself into the city, he might suffer
in the like manner as Uzzah had suffered, who, upon his bare putting out his
hand to the ark, died in the manner already mentioned, he did not receive it to
himself into the city, but he took it aside unto a certain place belonging to a
righteous man, whose name was Obededom, who was by his family a Levite, and
deposited the ark with him; and it remained there three entire months. This
augmented the house of Obededom, and conferred many blessings upon it.
And when the king heard what
had befallen Obededom, how he was become, of a poor man in a low estate,
exceeding happy, and the object of envy to all those that saw or inquired after
his house, he took courage, and, hoping that he should meet with no misfortune
thereby, he transferred the ark to his own house; the priests carrying it,
while seven companies of singers, who were set in that order by the king, went
before it, and while he himself played upon the harp, and joined in the music,
insomuch, that when his wife Michel, the daughter of Saul, who was our first
king, saw him so doing, she laughed at him. But when they had brought in the
ark, they placed it under the tabernacle which David had pitched for it, and he
offered costly sacrifices and peace-offerings, and treated the whole multitude,
and dealt both to the women, and the men, and the infants a loaf of bread and a
cake, and another cake baked in a pan, with the portion of the sacrifice. So
when he had thus feasted the people, he sent them away, and he himself returned
to his own house.
3. But when Michal his
wife, the daughter of Saul, came and stood by him, she wished him all other
happiness, and entreated that whatsoever he should further desire, to the
utmost possibility, might be given him by God, and that he might be favorable
to him; yet did she blame him, that so great a king as he was should dance
after an unseemly manner, and in his dancing, uncover himself among the
servants and the handmaidens. But he replied, that he was not ashamed to do
what was acceptable to God, who had preferred him before her father, and before
all others; that he would play frequently, and dance, without any regard to
what the handmaidens and she herself thought of it. So this Michal, who was
David's wife, had no children; however, when she was afterward married to him
to whom Saul her father had given her, (for at this time David had taken her
away from him, and had her himself,) she bare five children. But concerning
those matters I shall discourse in a proper place.
4. Now when the king
saw that his affairs grew better almost every day, by the will of God, he
thought he should offend him, if, while he himself continued in houses made of
cedar, such as were of a great height, and had the most curious works of
architecture in them, he should overlook the ark while it was laid in a
tabernacle, and was desirous to build a temple to God, as Moses had predicted
such a temple should be built. (8) And
when he had discoursed with Nathan the prophet about these things, and had been
encouraged by him to do whatsoever he had a mind to do, as having God with him,
and his helper in all things, he was thereupon the more ready to set about that
building.
But God appeared to Nathan
that very night, and commanded him to say to David, (9) that he took his purpose and his desires kindly, since
nobody had before now taken it into their head to build him a temple, although
upon his having such a notion he would not permit him to build him that temple,
because he had made many wars, and was defiled with the slaughter of his
enemies; that, however, after his death, in his old age, and when he had lived
a long life, there should be a temple built by a son of his, who should take
the kingdom after him, and should be called Solomon, whom he promised to
provide for, as a father provides for his son, by preserving the kingdom for
his son's posterity, and delivering it to them; but that he would still punish
him, if he sinned, with diseases and barrenness of land.
When David understood this
from the prophet, and was overjoyful at this knowledge of the sure continuance
of the dominion to his posterity, and that his house should be splendid, and
very famous, he came to the ark, and fell down on his face, and began to adore
God, and to return thanks to him for all his benefits, as well for those that
he had already bestowed upon him in raising him from a low state, and from the
employment of a shepherd, to so great dignity of dominion and glory; as for
those also which he had promised to his posterity; and besides, for that
providence which he had exercised over the Hebrews in procuring them the
liberty they enjoyed. And when he had said thus, and had sung a hymn of praise
to God, he went his way.
Footnotes
(6) It deserves here to be remarked, that Saul very rarely,
and David very frequently, consulted God by Urim; and that David aimed always
to depend, not on his own prudence or abilities but on the Divine direction,
contrary to Saul's practice. See Sect. 2, and the note on
Antiq. B. III. Ch. 8. Sect. 9; and when Saul's
daughter, (but David's wife,) Michal, laughed at David's dancing before the
ark, 2 Samuel 6:16, &c., and here, Sect. l, 2, 3, it is probable she did
so, because her father Saul did not use to pay such a regard to the ark, to the
Urim there inquired by, or to God's worship before it, and because she thought
it beneath the dignity of a king to be so religious.
(7) Josephus seems to be partly in the right, when he observes
here that Uzzah was no priest, (though perhaps he might be a Levite,) and was
therefore struck dead for touching the ark, contrary to the law, and for which
profane rashness death was the penalty by that law, Numbers 4:15, 20. See the
like before, Antiq. B. VI. Ch. 1. Sect. 4. It is
not improbable that the putting this ark in a cart, when it ought to have been
carried by the priests or Levites, as it was presently here in Josephus so
carried from Obededom's house to David's, might be also an occasion of the
anger of God on that breach of his law. See Numbers 4:15; 1 Chronicles 15:13.
(8) Josephus here informs us, that, according to his
understanding of the sense of his copy of the Pentateuch, Moses had himself
foretold the building of the temple, which yet is no where, that I know of, in
our present copies. And that this is not a mistake set down by him unwarily,
appears by what he observed before, on Antiq. B. IV.
Ch. 8. Sect. 46, how Moses foretold that, upon the Jews' future
disobedience, their temple should be burnt and rebuilt, and that not once only,
but several times afterward. See also Josephus's mention of God's former
commands to build such a temple presently, Ch. 14. Sect. 2, contrary to our
other copies, or at least to our translation of the Hebrew, 2 Samuel 7:6, 7; 1
Chronicles 17:5, 6.
(9) Josephus seems, in this place, with our modern
interpreters to confound the two distinct predictions which God made to David
and to Nathan, concerning the building him a temple by one of David's
posterity; the one belongeth to Solomon, the other to the Messiah; the
distinction between which is of the greatest consequence to the Christian
religion.
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