The Proclamation of God: Unveiling the Journey of Saul

The central theme of this podcast episode revolves around the divine orchestration of events leading to the anointing of Saul as the first king of Israel, despite the people's misguided desire for a monarch. In our discourse, we delve into the narrative found in First Samuel, specifically chapter nine, where we observe the transition of focus from the prophet Samuel to Saul. The episode elucidates the nuances of Israel's yearning for a king, which was emblematic of their desire to conform to worldly standards, reflecting a profound spiritual deficiency. We explore God's patience and mercy, as He grants the Israelites their request, ultimately leading to Saul’s selection as a leader. Through this examination, we uncover the implications of external appearances versus inner character, emphasizing that God’s faithfulness persists even amidst human unfaithfulness.
Takeaways:
- The podcast emphasizes the importance of recognizing God's faithfulness even amidst Israel's rebellion and disobedience.
- Pastor Josh highlights the contrast between the external appearance of Saul and the internal qualities valued by God.
- Listeners are encouraged to understand that God's mercy allows for redemption even after making poor choices in life.
- The episode illustrates how Saul's journey begins with divine guidance despite his eventual failures as a leader.
- Pastor Josh reflects on the message of God's providence, illustrating that He works behind the scenes to fulfill His purposes.
- The discussion serves as a reminder that one’s spiritual journey can be marred by internal struggles, which may not manifest immediately.
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This podcast is produced by Ralph Estep, Jr., host of Financially Confident Christian, a daily podcast on Christian Finance you can find it at https://www.financiallyconfidentchristian.com
00:00 - Untitled
00:00 - Introduction to the Podcast
01:04 - The Transition to Saul: A New Era in Israel
10:02 - The Search for Hope: Saul's Journey
14:51 - The Search for the Seer
19:33 - God's Plan for Saul: The Transition to Leadership
26:23 - The Anointing of Saul
31:41 - The Life of Saul: A Journey of Faithfulness and Failure
Hello and welcome to the Middletown Baptist Church Podcast, where we are proclaiming the truth to the world.
Speaker AMy name is Pastor Josh, and I want to thank you for listening to this podcast.
Speaker AI hope that this podcast can be a blessing to you and strengthen you in the word of God.
Speaker ANow, come along.
Speaker ALet's look into the Bible and see what God has for us here today.
Speaker AAll right, we're going to go ahead and continue our Bible study here in First Samuel.
Speaker ASo if you want to follow along in your Bibles, we're in First Samuel, chapter nine.
Speaker AAnd if you've been with us now for a while, you know what we've been doing.
Speaker AWe've been tracking this book of the Bible verse by verse.
Speaker AAnd really the first eight chapters have a focus on a man named Samuel.
Speaker AObviously, at the very beginning, we know that his mom, Hannah, was praying for a child, and God granted her a child in his grace and in his mercy.
Speaker AAnd so Samuel was committed to the Lord.
Speaker AAnd so again, the first.
Speaker AReally, the first eight chapters is dealing with Samuel and his relationship with God for the most part.
Speaker AAnd now here in chapter nine, we see somewhat of a transition from the focus being on Samuel to the focus being on a guy named Saul.
Speaker AAnd if you remember, back in chapter eight, the people were crying out and saying essentially this.
Speaker AWe want our own king.
Speaker AWe want a king like everybody else.
Speaker AIf you remember back in verse, or even all the way back in, at the beginning of the chapter First Samuel, chapter eight, they demand a king.
Speaker AAnd they say, we want one just like everybody else.
Speaker AWe want to be just like the world.
Speaker AWe want to have a king like all the other pagan nations.
Speaker AAnd Samuel warns Israel, he says, israel, if you want this, this is what you're going to get.
Speaker AAnd God has patience with the people.
Speaker AHe gives them a second chance.
Speaker ABut essentially they.
Speaker AThey say, no, we want a king of our own.
Speaker AWe want to be just like all the other nation nations.
Speaker AThat's verse five.
Speaker AAt the very end of verse five of chapter eight, they said, we want a king to judge us like everybody else.
Speaker AAnd so the desire to have a king was not a bad desire, but the motivation behind the desire was the wrong thing.
Speaker AThe.
Speaker AThe motivation was this.
Speaker AWe want to be like the world.
Speaker AWe want to be like everybody else.
Speaker AAnd so God in his patience, God and his mercy, allows for them to essentially have their own king.
Speaker ANow, leading up to this point, all the way from the very beginning, all the way up to this point, it essentially was what we call a theocracy.
Speaker AGod was king.
Speaker AThere were Individuals that were judges.
Speaker AThere were individuals that somewhat gave some guidance when it came to spiritual matters, like prophets and such, like Samuel.
Speaker ABut up until this point, Israel had not had a human king.
Speaker AAnd so they cried out, God gave them what they wanted.
Speaker AThis is indicative of what we see in Romans chapter one.
Speaker AIf you remember back in Romans chapter one, in our study in Romans, the Bible says that there's going to be individuals that want what they want and eventually God gives them over to what they want.
Speaker ABut I want you to see a verse in the New Testament that kind of parallels, I believe 1st Samuel chapter 9.
Speaker AAnd that's found in 2nd Timothy chapter 2.
Speaker AAnd so I think this is important for us to know because even in Israel's rebellion, even in Israel's selfishness, even in Israel's pride, God still extends mercy to them.
Speaker AHe still is faithful.
Speaker AHe still gives them an opportunity to have a king.
Speaker AAnd a lot of people will look at the life of Saul and say, well, Saul didn't have a chance.
Speaker ABut we see Saul having many chances by the Lord to obey him and to ultimately be a good king.
Speaker AAnd so in the midst of Israel's rebellion, God still gives them a chance.
Speaker AGod still gives them mercy.
Speaker AAnd so in 2 Timothy chapter 2, I think that this is so important for us to know because sometimes we think that if when we make a mistake, God's just going to let us go, we when we make a mistake as God's children, that he's just going to forget about us.
Speaker ABut in second Timothy chapter 2, verse 13, it says this.
Speaker AIf we believe not, or in the, in the concept of the original language, it's this, if we lack faith, if we struggle in believing what the Lord gives us, not necessarily in salvation, but in the case of trusting him on a day to day basis, he says, yet he abideth faithful.
Speaker AMeaning this, when we struggle, when we're faithless, when we doubt God, when we have our own pride, when we have our own selfishness, it says here, he still is faithful.
Speaker ASo the way that you could summarize that thought is this.
Speaker AEven when we're not faithful, God is faithful.
Speaker AEven when Israel was not faithful, God was faithful.
Speaker AEven when a believer is unfaithful, God is still faithful.
Speaker AAnd it says there, why not?
Speaker ABecause we're great people, not because we deserve it.
Speaker ABut it says here, he cannot deny Himself, meaning God cannot go against his character.
Speaker AGod is faithful in his character.
Speaker AHe's not just faithful because we're faithful.
Speaker AHe's faithful because ultimately that's part of his character.
Speaker AAnd so therefore, Israel is not faithful to the Lord.
Speaker AThey want to go out and they want to have what the world has.
Speaker AThe Bible likens it in the Old Testament to spiritual adultery.
Speaker AIsrael goes against the Lord and seeks after the world.
Speaker AAnd so God could have just cut the.
Speaker AThe nation of Israel away and said, you want your own king?
Speaker AFine, have a Canaanite king.
Speaker ABut no, he's faithful.
Speaker AAnd he allows for a man named Saul to be selected.
Speaker AAnd then Saul could have.
Speaker AWe're going to see this in the study with Saul.
Speaker ASaul had every opportunity to follow God, but.
Speaker AAnd he starts out really good.
Speaker AHe starts out in a good place.
Speaker ABut the story of Saul is essentially a story of someone who starts in a good place, but yet just devolves into a place of brokenness and destruction.
Speaker AAnd he gets to a place at the very end where.
Speaker AWhere he's empty, where he's spiritually in darkness and evil takes over.
Speaker AAnd so we're going to study the life of Saul here, starting in chapter number nine.
Speaker ASo let's look at it here.
Speaker AWe're going to go through it as much as we can tonight.
Speaker AAnd a lot of this becomes what we consider in the Bible to be descriptive passages.
Speaker AWhat do I mean by that?
Speaker AWell, there's some passages in the Bible that are prescriptive, meaning do this or don't do this.
Speaker ASo, for example, you know, love God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength.
Speaker AThat would be prescriptive.
Speaker ABut then we have other passages of scripture that are considered to be descriptive, meaning it's just describing what happened.
Speaker AAnd that's what a lot of this is.
Speaker AAnd so some of this can be monotonous.
Speaker AAnd so some of you are not into history or you're not into records.
Speaker AThis might get a little bit boring, but I'm going to try my best to make the words come off the page.
Speaker AI'm going to try to see if we can all see the message here behind chapter number nine.
Speaker ASo, first one, it says this.
Speaker ANow, there was a man of Benjamin.
Speaker ANow we'll stop there.
Speaker AThis is describing Saul, and it says what tribe he is from.
Speaker AAnd Remember, there's the 12 tribes of Israel.
Speaker AAnd each tribe has its own significance.
Speaker AThe tribe of Benjamin was a very small tribe.
Speaker AIt was not going to be usually considered by most people at the time to be the tribe that was the most powerful tribe.
Speaker ABut there's also other aspects of the tribe of Benjamin which most of you may or may not know.
Speaker ABut eventually there's some people in the New Testament that you might know that are the tribe of Benjamin, another Saul, who eventually becomes Paul.
Speaker AHe was of the tribe of Benjamin.
Speaker AAnd so you'll see that that phrase throughout Scripture.
Speaker ASo it says that he's from the tribe of Benjamin, whose, whose name was Kish and son of Abel, the son of Zeror, the son of Becket, the son of a Benjamite, a mighty man of power.
Speaker AAnd he had a son whose name was Saul.
Speaker AAnd so this is what we would consider to be the physical description of Saul which when we see him described we would say, yes, of course, that would be the king.
Speaker AAnd, and remember the contrast between the people's king and God's king.
Speaker AWe're going to see a description here of Saul who what we will see here will be the people's king.
Speaker AThe people say this, this guy looks like a king.
Speaker AAnd then eventually we're going to get to a guy named David who was God's king, not the people's king.
Speaker AAnd David is not going to be someone who people would pick out as king.
Speaker AActually, if you remember, David's own family forgot about him.
Speaker AAll the other brothers lined up and David was out in the field and, and again we'll get to that later on.
Speaker ABut this is a description of Saul.
Speaker AAnd what we see here in this description is that he is a very impressive, good looking man, says, and he had a son whose name was Saul, a choice young man and a goodly, meaning he's of good looks.
Speaker AAnd there was not among the children of Israel goodlier person than he, meaning he looked the best.
Speaker AHe was the best.
Speaker AHe was the choice individual.
Speaker AFrom his shoulders and upward, he was higher than any of the people.
Speaker AAnd so this speaks to his physical stature.
Speaker ANow we don't know exactly how tall he is, even though there's a lot of commentators that have some guesses about how tall Saul is.
Speaker ABut what we do know is that he's taller than everybody else.
Speaker AAnd so regardless of his actual height, we do know that he's taller than everybody.
Speaker ASo that would bring some sense of power.
Speaker AAnd when people would look at him, they would notice that he had that good looking appearance.
Speaker AAnd so Saul looked like a great king.
Speaker AAnd if being king over Israel was all about image, which for many people it was, Saul was the man for the job.
Speaker ABut we do know that God is actually looking at other things.
Speaker AWe know that God doesn't look on the outward appearance.
Speaker AGod looks on the heart.
Speaker ABut here we see a profile of someone who fits the bill for the people.
Speaker AWe go on and See really what his situation is in this case.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd we actually see that at this point in time, Saul is a picture of the people of Israel.
Speaker AAnd so Saul would be an individual representation of the spiritual aspect of the whole nation at this point.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd so from the outside, Israel looks very powerful.
Speaker AFrom the outside, Israel looks successful.
Speaker ABut on the inside, we know that spiritually they're decaying because they're desiring their own path.
Speaker AAnd essentially what we see here is that Saul had lost his dad's donkeys, okay?
Speaker AAnd so he's basically walking lost.
Speaker AHe doesn't know where to turn.
Speaker AThat's a great picture of how Israel was at this point, trying to find some kind of hope, trying to find some sort of satisfaction in losing something.
Speaker ASo verse three, in the asses of Kish, Saul's father, were lost.
Speaker AAnd Kish said to Saul his son, take now one of these servants with thee and arise.
Speaker AGo seek the asses.
Speaker AAnd he passed through Mount Ephraim and passed through the land of Cilicia, but they found them not.
Speaker ASo they're searching, they're looking, they have.
Speaker AEventually we're going to see here that they lose hope.
Speaker AThey don't know where to find them.
Speaker AAnd so they passed through the land of Shailen, and they.
Speaker AThere they were not.
Speaker AAnd he passed through the land of the Benjamites, but they found them not.
Speaker AAnd when they had come to the land of Zoof, Saul said to his servant that was with him, come and let us return, lest my father leave caring for the asses and take thought for us.
Speaker AAnd so in this case, basically what.
Speaker AWhat Saul says is that, hey, we're.
Speaker AWe can't figure this out.
Speaker AWe can't find our way.
Speaker AWe don't know where to go.
Speaker AAnd so basically, Saul is in a state of frustration.
Speaker AAnd we see that happening a lot with Saul throughout his life.
Speaker AHis character trait of anything, you could say a lot of things that would characterize Saul, but one of those things would be he's frustrated.
Speaker AHe can't figure out the right way to go.
Speaker AAnd so.
Speaker ABut God is still working.
Speaker AAnd we see God's hand of providence on the life of Saul, even in the life of the donkeys, actually, because we all kind of aligns him to come and find a fellow named Samuel, which you guys are all familiar with.
Speaker ASo let's look at verse number six.
Speaker AHis servant actually gives him some advice.
Speaker AAnd he said unto him, behold, now there is a city, a man of God, and he is an honorable man.
Speaker AAnd so he's referencing Samuel.
Speaker AAll that he saith cometh surely to pass.
Speaker ANow let us go thither.
Speaker APer adventure, he can show us our way that we should go.
Speaker ASo you see the irony here.
Speaker AIn verse 6, you have Saul and you have his servants who are looking for these lost donkeys.
Speaker ASo it's a material need that they're looking for.
Speaker AThey.
Speaker AThey think that Samuel could be the guy who tell them where the donkeys are.
Speaker ASo they're going to Samuel, a prophet of God, to give them direction on their material loss.
Speaker ANow, really, what they should be doing is going to Samuel for spiritual advice, but that's not what they're doing.
Speaker ABut the irony of what is being said here is that it is true.
Speaker ASamuel could show them the way to go, but not necessarily the way to find their donkeys, even though he does.
Speaker ABut he should show them the way to go, to follow the Lord.
Speaker ABecause Saul needs guidance when he becomes king.
Speaker AVerse 7.
Speaker AThen said Saul to his servant, but behold, if we go again, we see salt here.
Speaker AI want you to see this.
Speaker ASaul is always focused on the material.
Speaker AHe says, if we go, what.
Speaker AWhat does he say?
Speaker AWhat shall we bring the man?
Speaker AFor the bread is spent in our vessels, and there is not a present to bring the man of God.
Speaker AWhat have we?
Speaker AHe says, how could we go to this guy?
Speaker AWe don't even have anything to give him.
Speaker ARemember, he's thinking, like, what could we give him?
Speaker AIt's kind of like the whole idea of, I give you something, you give me something.
Speaker AAnd that's, again, that's not how God works.
Speaker AUltimately, God gives us everything, and all we come to him in brokenness is.
Speaker AIs in humility, saying, lord, I need you.
Speaker ABut in this case, it was customary of the time to come to anybody for advice.
Speaker AYou would want to bring something with you as a gift.
Speaker AAnd so you could look at this as just, hey, Saul's trying to be, you know, nice guy.
Speaker AAlso, you could look at Saul thinking that his focus is only on the material.
Speaker AI don't have anything to give him.
Speaker ASo let's see what.
Speaker AWhat happens next.
Speaker AVerse 8.
Speaker AAnd the servant answered Saul again and said, behold, I have here at hand the fourth part of a shekel of silver that will I give to the man of God to tell us our way.
Speaker ASo what we see here in this case is that they're expecting to pay Samuel for his prophetic services.
Speaker AAnd so the.
Speaker AThe servant says, hey, I've actually got something here.
Speaker AI've got some money.
Speaker AAnd so I think we can bring that to him.
Speaker ASo that's what they do.
Speaker AVerse 9.
Speaker ABefore time in Israel, when a man went to inquire of God, thus he spake, come, let us go to see the seer.
Speaker AFor he that is now called a prophet was before time called a seer.
Speaker ASo basically what we see here is that if there is a term seer in the Old Testament, in this particular case, it's talking about a prophet.
Speaker AAnd that idea would be that the prophet and the seer are interchangeable.
Speaker AThe prophet not only professes the word of God, proclaims the word of God, but also the prophet would see the way that God is working.
Speaker ASo he says, Samuel is a seer.
Speaker AIt's not that Samuel has the supernatural power in himself, but because of his relationship with God, he's able to essentially give the guidance of the Lord.
Speaker AAnd that's what he's talking about here.
Speaker ASo the word seer is.
Speaker AIs essentially interchangeable with.
Speaker AWith prophet.
Speaker ASo, so we know that that might be the case.
Speaker AAnd so they're.
Speaker AThey're coming to consult a prophet, and they're going to try to see if he knows where their donkeys are.
Speaker AVerse 10.
Speaker AThen said Saul to his servant.
Speaker AWell said.
Speaker AHe said, that's a good idea.
Speaker ACome, let us go.
Speaker ASo they went unto the city where the man of God was.
Speaker ASo they think that they're coming to see Samuel for this help in finding donkeys, where we ultimately know that God is directing them to Samuel to find out that Saul is going to be the next king or the first king.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AVerse 11.
Speaker AAnd as they went up to the hill to the city, they found young maidens going out to draw water and sentence them.
Speaker AIs the seer here?
Speaker AAnd they said unto them, and said, he is.
Speaker ABehold, he is before you.
Speaker AMake haste now.
Speaker AFor he came today to the city.
Speaker AAnd for there is a sacrifice of the people today in the high place.
Speaker ASo they're like, you just missed them.
Speaker AHurry up, go find them.
Speaker AVerse 13.
Speaker AAs soon as ye be come into the city, ye shall straightway find him before he go up to the high place to eat.
Speaker AFor the people will not eat until he comes, because he doth bless the sacrifice.
Speaker AAnd afterwards they eat that be bidden.
Speaker ANow therefore get you up, and for about this time ye shall find him.
Speaker ASo they go.
Speaker AVerse 14.
Speaker AAnd they went up to the city.
Speaker AAnd when they were come into the city, behold, Samuel came out against them, and for to go up to the high place.
Speaker ANow the Lord had told Samuel in his ear a day before Saul came, so he's A this is interesting because we actually find out that God's working ahead of all this.
Speaker AAnd I think this is another point that we could take on a theological side of things, is that when we think that we're right in the middle of it, God's already ahead of us.
Speaker AI know there's been times in my life, and probably in your life, that you could say, I didn't know that God was working behind the scenes, but he was.
Speaker AI didn't know that God was working ahead of me, but he was.
Speaker AAnd that's the case here.
Speaker ASaul has no idea that God has talked to Samuel about this.
Speaker ABut we see here, because we have the blessing of Scripture, that God had already come and talked to Samuel.
Speaker AAnd I like.
Speaker AI like the way that it mentions it here.
Speaker AVerse 15, it says, now the Lord had told Samuel in his ear a day before.
Speaker ASo the original Hebrew has the idea of God came and unclog Samuel's ears and filled him with this information.
Speaker ASo God spoke to Samuel prior to this, and he said, tomorrow about this time, I will send thee a man out of the land of Benjamin, and thou shalt anoint him to be captain over my people Israel, that he may save my people out of the hand of the Philistines.
Speaker AI'm going to stop right there because many of you know that Saul is.
Speaker AIsn't a great king.
Speaker AHe has some high points, but Saul essentially is a man of himself, and he fails in many cases.
Speaker ABut we do know that God has a plan for Saul, and the plan was for him to have victory over the Philistines.
Speaker AAnd we know that Saul did lead that.
Speaker AAnd so I think, again, that's a picture of God's faithfulness.
Speaker AEven in the midst of our unfaithfulness, God is still working and giving us opportunities to have victories.
Speaker AAnd so he does that.
Speaker AAnd he says, this is my plan for Saul.
Speaker AFor I have looked upon my people because their cry is, come unto me.
Speaker AAnd I just see here really an example of God's faithfulness and patience and mercy with people who did not know what was best for them.
Speaker AIsrael was pleading with God for something.
Speaker AAnd eventually God says, okay, I will give you that.
Speaker ABut even in the midst of that, we know there's a verse in Romans 8, Romans 8, 28, that God works all things together for good.
Speaker ANow, I think that that principle can be seen right here, that even in Israel's bad decision in wanting a human king, God can still use that for his good.
Speaker AAnd I think that's also an idea that we can take in our own life that we shouldn't want to mess up, we shouldn't try to mess up.
Speaker ABut the grace and the mercy is that when we do mess up, God can use those good decisions or those bad decisions for good.
Speaker AI should say he can use good decisions, of course, but he also can use bad decisions.
Speaker AAnd, and I think all of us probably in our life could say, well, I didn't draw it up that way.
Speaker AI definitely know that that wasn't God's will for me to do these things.
Speaker ABut at the end, God can work those out for good.
Speaker AAnd I hope that we all can take, you know, comfort and solace in the fact that we don't have to be perfect.
Speaker AEven though we should strive to follow God in every way that we possibly can.
Speaker AI think that all of us should strive to be obedient and have a godly lives.
Speaker ABut at the same time, when we do make a mistake, God can revitalize, he can renew, he can take ashes and turn them into beauty.
Speaker AAnd that's what we see here in this case is that even Israel's desire to have this king of their own outside of the control of God was not going to be the case.
Speaker AEven though they wanted their own king, it was still going to be the under their control and ultimately the allowance of God.
Speaker AAnd God allows for this to happen.
Speaker AAnd God actually does some degree ordains for this to happen.
Speaker AAnd so I think that's important for us to note in our lives that if we think we've done too much to break God's will in our life, we haven't.
Speaker ABecause God can use those bad decisions for his ultimate good.
Speaker AAnd that's what he does here in this case.
Speaker AHe says they, they're crying out, I hear them.
Speaker ABut even in their bad decision, I'm giving them something in grace.
Speaker AVerse 17.
Speaker AAnd when Samuel saw Saul, the Lord said unto him, behold the man who I spake of, spake to thee of this same shall reign over my people.
Speaker ASo, so God obviously identifies Saul as the man that, that Samuel would eventually anoint.
Speaker ABut things have to happen before that.
Speaker AAnd so God is working ahead.
Speaker AHe identifies Saul.
Speaker AVerse 18.
Speaker AThen Saul drew near to Samuel in the gate and said, tell me, I pray thee, where the seer's house is.
Speaker ASo obviously Samuel knows who it is, but Saul doesn't.
Speaker AAnd Samuel answered Saul and said, I am the seer.
Speaker AGo up before me unto the high place, for ye shall eat with me today and tomorrow I will let thee go, and will tell Thee all that is in thine heart.
Speaker AAnd so I, I find this super interesting because again, Saul is coming to Samuel for a material need, but he's going to leave the occasion with Samuel, as it says here, and God's going to reveal what's in the heart of Saul and ultimately reveal what God's plan is for him.
Speaker AAnd so we're going to see verse 20.
Speaker AAnd as for thine asses that were lost three days ago, set not thy mind on them.
Speaker ANow, this is kind of like in, I don't know if you guys ever seen, like a movie and, you know, someone knows something that the other person doesn't know, and they mention it, they're like, wait, how did you know that I was looking for the donkeys?
Speaker AThat's essentially what happens here.
Speaker ASaul never tells Samuel that he's looking for donkeys yet, but Samuel knows.
Speaker ASo Samuel says, hey, just come back and I'm going to let you know where those donkeys are.
Speaker AAnd he.
Speaker AAnd he knows how long they were actually gone for.
Speaker ASo this shows the.
Speaker AThe omnipotence, but also the omniscience of God.
Speaker AGod is all powerful, but God is all knowing.
Speaker AGod knows everything.
Speaker AGod's ahead of us.
Speaker AThis reminds me of.
Speaker AOf many occasions in scripture where God knew what was on the heart of the individual before the individual shared that with him.
Speaker AAnd so he says, and on whom is all the desire of Israel?
Speaker AIs it not on thee and on all thy father's house?
Speaker AAnd so Samuel goes, hey, I'll tell you where your.
Speaker AYour donkeys are.
Speaker ABut also I'm going to tell you that all of Israel is resting on you.
Speaker AThat.
Speaker AThat here.
Speaker AHe says, is it not on thee and on all thy father's house the desire of Israel?
Speaker AAnd Saul doesn't know how to take this.
Speaker AYou can look at this from a few different perspectives.
Speaker ASome people think that verse 21 indicates Saul's humility.
Speaker AAnd that could be the case.
Speaker AMaybe Saul had not had his ego filled yet, and he's still a very humble guy.
Speaker AOr it could just be Saul trying to pass the buck off.
Speaker ABut Saul basically says, am not I a Benjaminite of the smallest of the tribes of Israel?
Speaker AHe says, why?
Speaker AWhy would all of Israel want me?
Speaker AWhat's the big deal with me?
Speaker AAnd he says, my family, the least of all the families of the tribe of Benjamin, Wherefore then speakest thou so to me?
Speaker ASo he's like, why would you talk to me this way?
Speaker AI'm not that important.
Speaker ANow if you do go back, because it Just says in verse one that his dad's a mighty man of power and that, that Saul is a choice man.
Speaker ASo it is kind of incongruent basically to see Saul respond this way.
Speaker AAnd so we don't know the heart of Saul necessarily, other than the fact that he could be being very humble here or he could be just trying to say, like, I don't really want to share what I am or who I am.
Speaker AVerse 22.
Speaker AAnd Samuel took Saul his servant and brought them into the parlor and made them to sit in the cheapest place among them that were bidden, which were about 30 persons.
Speaker ASo this is important as well because, you know, even in our culture today, we understand sitting in the choice seats, right?
Speaker AAnd so I as, interestingly enough, I saw a, a recent post.
Speaker AIt was a picture.
Speaker AIt was somewhere in England they were selling, I think it was England.
Speaker AMight have been, it might have been in the United States early on.
Speaker ABut it was a picture of when a church used to basically rent out pews.
Speaker ASo you had to pay money for where you were going to sit on Sunday morning.
Speaker AAnd I was so interested to see where all the most expensive seats were because I thought maybe they were up front, but that wasn't the case.
Speaker AIt wasn't up front.
Speaker AIt wasn't in the very back, even though it obviously wasn't a Baptist church, because then that would have been the, the high price seats.
Speaker AI, I can say that because when I grew up, I sat on the back rows.
Speaker ABut, but actually it was like right in the middle.
Speaker AIt was like right in the middle area.
Speaker ABut either way, but, but we all know that when you go to a place, maybe going to a sports game or maybe you're going to.
Speaker AAnd even a meal, and you're sitting in the, in the big spot, the big ticket spot, that's exactly what Saul is given by Samuel.
Speaker AHe says, hey, come sit in the nice spot.
Speaker AAnd this would have been a place of honor.
Speaker AThis would have been a place of recognition.
Speaker AAnd so Saul was given a special portion.
Speaker AAnd again, I, I think we could just look at this as descriptive and go, okay, he sat in the nice seat.
Speaker ABut what does that mean?
Speaker AI think that what that means is still.
Speaker AGod is still giving Saul every opportunity, the taste of the blessings of being part of this opportunity to serve him.
Speaker AHe says, hey, you can have all of this.
Speaker AYou can, you can sit in seat of honor.
Speaker AYou can, you can focus on this opportunity to serve me.
Speaker AAnd so Saul was given a special portion.
Speaker AAnd I believe that he had every opportunity to serve God.
Speaker AAnd we're going to see that.
Speaker AThat he doesn't.
Speaker ASo moving Forward here, verse 23.
Speaker AAnd Samuel said unto the cook, bring the portion which I gave thee of which I said unto thee, set it by thee.
Speaker ASo he says, give him the good food and cook.
Speaker AAnd the cook took up the shoulder and that was upon it, and set it before Saul.
Speaker ASo that's like he gives him the best cut of meat.
Speaker AAnd Samuel said, behold, that which is left, set it before thee and eat.
Speaker AFor unto this time hath it been kept for thee since I said, I have invited the people.
Speaker ASo Saul did eat with Samuel that day.
Speaker ASo this just describes essentially their.
Speaker ATheir meal that they had together, this opportunity to see this special blessing.
Speaker AVerse 25.
Speaker AAnd when they were come down from the high place into the city, Samuel communed with Saul upon the top of the house.
Speaker ASo Samuel isolates Saul and he's now going to give him the truth.
Speaker AHe's going to give him.
Speaker AWhat we're going to see here is called the Word of God.
Speaker AAnd, and this is obviously not something that any of us are probably going to experience.
Speaker AWe're not going to experience being called by God to be the king of Israel, but we all have an opportunity to hear the word of God in.
Speaker AIn the capacity of the word of God, the Bible, or through preaching or through teaching.
Speaker ASo this is Saul's opportunity to take in what God wants for him.
Speaker AVerse 26.
Speaker AAnd they arose early, and it came to pass about the spring of the day that Samuel called Saul to the top of the house, saying, up that I may send thee away.
Speaker AAnd Saul arose, and they went out, both of them, he and sought Samuel abroad.
Speaker AAnd as they were going down to the end of the city, Samuel said to Saul, bid the servant pass on before us.
Speaker AHe says, I want to have you alone.
Speaker AAnd he passed on, but stand thou still a while that I may show thee the word of God.
Speaker AAnd so that's where this chapter ends.
Speaker ASamuel, no doubt, at this point tells Saul about Israel's desire for a king, that.
Speaker AThat God had allowed for Saul to be that king.
Speaker AAnd so Samuel is going to introduce essentially the official anointing to Saul here and then.
Speaker ASo we're going to talk about next week.
Speaker AWe're going to talk about Saul's anointing and how even in the midst of Israel's rebellion and even in Saul's materialism and his selfishness, God still allows for the anointing to happen.
Speaker AIn the anointing, by the way, the anointing of oil in the Old Testament is a picture of the Holy Spirit being placed upon an individual's life, even though in the Old Testament the Holy Spirit did not entwell believers.
Speaker AWhen we so give you a quick theological lesson, the New Testament tells us after Pentecost that after we trust in Jesus as our Savior, the Holy Spirit indwells us, meaning he comes into our hearts, he comes into our lives, he indwells us, he's within us, and that cannot be taken away.
Speaker ABut in the Old Testament, that isn't the typical norm of what would happen.
Speaker AWe would see indications that the.
Speaker AIt says in the Old Testament that the Spirit of God would come upon people.
Speaker AAnd so it wouldn't be a permanent indwelling of the Spirit as much as it was at what we would call temporary moments where God would come on them in the midst of obedience.
Speaker ABut what we will see that even in some cases that.
Speaker AThat in First Samuel, that Saul had times when God's power was working through him.
Speaker ABut more often than not, Saul chooses to do his own thing and follows his own path.
Speaker AAnd so when we see Saul here being anointed by God, don't think that he was saved here and then eventually lives in sin and lost his salvation and God is not faithful to him.
Speaker ANo, that's.
Speaker AThat's not what happens.
Speaker ABecause the Bible says that initially every believer is saved through faith, we essentially will see a big debate on whether or not Saul is in heaven or not at the end of his life.
Speaker AThere's a lot of debate on whether or not Saul was saved.
Speaker ASaul was not saved.
Speaker AWe don't necessarily know for sure.
Speaker AThere's some speculation on, on both sides.
Speaker ABut what I will say is that really indications in his life will show that he does not live a life of faith.
Speaker AAnd so though we can't know his heart, we can see the fruit of his decisions.
Speaker AAnd what we can ultimately see is that Saul has a very hard time trusting in the plan of God.
Speaker AAnd we'll see that unfolding throughout his life.
Speaker ASo what lessons can we take from this passage of Scripture, even though it was predominantly a descriptive passage?
Speaker AWell, I will say a few things.
Speaker AI think the biggest lesson that we can see is that as second.
Speaker AAs second Timothy 2 told us, that there's still the faithfulness of God in the midst of our struggles, in the midst of our trials, even in the midst of our selfishness.
Speaker ANow, it doesn't mean that God's going to continuously bless us for bad decisions.
Speaker AThat's not the principle there.
Speaker AThe principle of sowing and reaping still lays out there even in the New Testament.
Speaker ABut what we do see is that God does give us more than we deserve, and he doesn't give us as much judgment as we do deserve.
Speaker AOkay, so that's the idea.
Speaker AThat's mercy and grace.
Speaker AThe definition of grace is that God gives us something that we don't deserve.
Speaker AOkay?
Speaker AThe definition of mercy is that God withholds things that we do deserve.
Speaker AAnd what did Israel deserve?
Speaker AIsrael deserved punishment because of their rebellion.
Speaker AThey did not deserve God's presence and guidance.
Speaker ABut yet at the same time, God does all those things for them.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ABecause they were his people and he was with them.
Speaker AAnd so today as believers, we have to understand that there are people that even today teach that, you know, if you committed this sin, you know, God's turned his back against you, that you've lost your salvation, that God can't tolerate that type of sin.
Speaker ABut what I will say is that the Bible tells us in many occasions, in Romans 8, in other books of the Bible, in the Book of John, but there is what we call internal security, that God holds us fast and there's nothing that we can do to reject him after we come to him in faith.
Speaker AYet there can be ups and downs and struggles in our life.
Speaker AAnd so I would look to First Samuel, Chapter 9 as a testament of God's faithfulness, even to people that are not faithful.
Speaker AI would also see the difference between the appearance of man and the heart of God.
Speaker AThe appearance of man was Saul.
Speaker AHe looked good, he was strong.
Speaker AHe was the man of the people.
Speaker ASo that must be the right choice.
Speaker ABut what we can see is that just because things look a certain way on the outside and is.
Speaker AAnd maybe an individual or teaching or a movement is appealing to what we would consider the flesh.
Speaker AIt doesn't mean that it's a work of God.
Speaker AJust because someone looks the part, just because.
Speaker AJust because someone has someone that follows them, just because someone is compelling in their message, that doesn't necessarily mean that they're from God.
Speaker AAnd we see that over and over again in Scripture.
Speaker ASo I say that because even in the book of Romans, it talks about how there can be a lot of zeal, but there's no truth, there's no knowledge.
Speaker AAnd so for the life of Saul, we see that he does have success, but ultimately he deviates from God's plan.
Speaker ASo first Samuel, chapter 10, we're going to come back next week and we're going to look at his anointing, and that's a big event, obviously.
Speaker AAnd then we'll see some initial victories in the life of Saul, and we'll see that Saul has some, some shortfalls, no doubt.
Speaker AAnd then we will obviously, over time, integrate David into the story.
Speaker AAnd as David comes in the story, that's when we really see Saul manifesting the sins of his heart from the past.
Speaker ADavid was basically a vessel used to reveal really Saul's heart, because David starts coming in and having successes.
Speaker AAnd what happens is that Saul's ego, Saul's inadequacies, his insecurities begin to be revealed when that happens.
Speaker AAnd so when what I would say is this, and I think this is another testimony of Saul's life.
Speaker ATypically in our lives, the outward manifestation of sin is, is precluded by an inward heart of sin that eventually will build up to outward actions.
Speaker AIt's not like we just start acting out in these terrible, egregious sins.
Speaker AThe Bible says, and Jesus says that usually what happens is the sin of the mind and the sin of the heart that leads the sin of the flesh.
Speaker AAnd so what I would encourage us to think about is this, let's not get to a place like Saul that we harbor darkness and bitterness in our life for so long that eventually, when outward stimuli come, our sin begins to manifest itself.
Speaker AReally, the, the picture that God gives in throughout the whole scriptures is essentially deal with sin as its infants, deal with it in the seed stage so that it doesn't take root, so that it doesn't grow.
Speaker AAnd so these are all things that we're going to be talking about in the life of Saul.
Speaker AAnd so Saul didn't just overnight become the crazy guy that we see throwing a spear at David and chasing David morning, evening and night because he's jealous.
Speaker ANo, it starts really at the beginning of his life as we, we track his story.
Speaker ASo that's a lesson for all of us to learn.
Speaker ASo I hope that you continue on in this series.
Speaker AI know that there is a lot of media about David and then by, you know, by extension, Saul, because Saul's portrayed always with David.
Speaker AAnd so I encourage you, you know, not to just shun media, but what I'm saying is just be careful.
Speaker ALike as you're studying anything with scripture, make sure that what you're intaking with, you know, TV and videos and all that kind of stuff, just make sure that that's not your standard.
Speaker AMake sure that the scriptures are standard, and then go from there.
Speaker AAnd then I think that that will help a lot when we're coming to our interpretation of Scripture.
Speaker AThank you again for listening to the Middletown Baptist Church Podcast.
Speaker AI hope that this sermon has been a blessing for you.
Speaker AIf you would like to find out more information about our church or this sermon, you can find us at middletownbaptistchurch.org or find us on Facebook or YouTube.
Speaker AYou can also email me directly at joshmissaroiddletownbaptistchurch dot com if you've enjoyed this podcast, please subscribe and follow along for future podcast and updates.
Speaker AThank you so much.
Speaker AGod Bless.
Speaker AHave a wonderful day.



